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Door was hard to open
After reading other stories, I knew enough to slide the lower drawer out and take off the spring. 30 second job. I did not realize that range doors slide vertically off the hinge, did that in about 2 mins. Put the new hinge on in 2 mins (3 Screws). Slid the door back on and done. Works like a champ. My wife has her eye on new stainless appliances. Sadly, she'll have to wait a while longer.
I really can't add much more to the very good instructions already posted. You will need a flashlight to see the spring -- when connected it stands vertical with one end connected to the hinge. There are 3 holes you can connect to -- I used the middle one, #2. The other end of the spring is anchored to a hole/slot in the stove frame. It is very easy to position this spring. Be careful though, there's a lot of sharp sheet metal in there. You will need a phillips head screwdriver to remove/install 3 sheet metal screws that fasten the hinge to the stove.
Plastic roller on hinge had broken causing door not to open easily
Slid door off hinges. Removed 3 screws which hold hinge in place. Removed drawer to access spring for hinge. Gasped at all the crumbs and crap which had collected underneath the drawer. Cleaned up crumbs+crap from floor. Disconnected spring from hinge and removed old hinge completely. Installed new hinge with 3 screws. Attached spring to hinge - center hole fitting. Slid drawer back in place. Angled hinges outward in order to re-install door. Slid door back onto hinges. Door now operates nice and smoothly. Job well done.
Pulled oven door up and off. Removed old hinge and installed new hinge. Replaced oven door. It was a very simple job. The whole project took less than 15 minutes.
I removed the door by pulling it up (according to the instructions). Than took a philips screwdriver and removed the three screws in each hinge, unhooked the springs and slid the old hinges out of the slots. The new hinges slid into the slots perfectly so the screws were installed, the springs rehooked and the door installed. Real simple.
The right hinge was broken and the door would not close properly.
I removed the door by pulling up and away from the hinges. I then removed the drawer. I unhooked the tension spring by hand and noted the opening. I then removed the three screws on the hinge assembly, removed the ole part, and replaced it with the new one. I replaced the tension spring and slid the door back on to the hinges. I did it all in less than 10 minutes.
The plastic wheel glide that the hinge runs back and forth on was worn off on one side so it was grinding and binding. Remove storage drawer from under oven. Open the door to the special catch position and carefully lift door off the hinges - (not by the handle, hold onto both sides). Take out three screws w/ a hex head nut driver, slip the hinge down into the hole, look under drawer area w/ flashlight and carefully unhook spring, while holding onto spring- pull old hinge out, see which hole has wear (that's the one you want to use of the three), insert new hinge all the way in and hook up spring. Pull hinge out and line up front plate w/ holes, insert 3 screws snugly. Done, awesome probably saved a 200.00 visit from the appliance guy. My husband thinks I'm amazing!
First I removed the two screws that hold the element in place. I then pulled the element out about 3 inches and disconnected the two wires. . . ) It was like drinking juice
I ordered the spark module and replaced it which was veru simple, plugged it in and it sparked only now and again. I finally said forget it and it has now stopped sparking but for how long I do not know.
Replace 4 White Burner Dishes ,4 Grey Burner Grates And Caps. With Black.
There were 3 ? Types of black burner dishes and 3 types of burner caps. The information I collected did not hint about the different sizes. We sent back 2 caps for the proper ones. Meantime 3 of the dishes were on backorder. I installed the one dish I had. Later the 3 backorder dishes arrived. I began to install them when I discovered I needeed more than one size. I am a retired aerospace engineer. I had to use my file and hammer to fit experiences to make up for my parts ordering deficiency. The new dishes, mounting holes, were different than the one I had previously installed . So in order not to return them and wait an additional few weeks , I filed the mounting holes sufficient to be able to mount them. Then I put the next part on and discovered that it did not fit the new location of the igniter . I filed the approx 1/2" dia hole from round to a "d"configuration on 3 parts , that allowed the igniter to function in two of the new locations . The fourth and smallest burner required an additional 1/4" spacer to move the gas supply riser closer tothe igniter. The burners are all working as new. No fire hazards. My wife does not know the goofs I made. I had to use some inventive methods and I'm still her hero. I would caution all di it yourself people to become very familiar with the parts they need. They may all look the same to the novice but there are slight differences that should require replacement and could take away your hero status.
Well after fighting with the door for a month, i went on this site and using their information, i found the model number (in the process i found the receipt for the oven and found out it was 20 years old still looks and works like new. Pulled the door up and off the hinges, removed the drawer, saw the spring was in the middle hole, removed three screws pulled out old hinge. Installed new hinge, 3 screws and the spring. put the door back on and wow it worked! Thanks!
Very easy job. Removed the 3 screws from the oven body, and slid the hinge out of the door. Slid in the new hinge, replaced the screws, and it was done. Very easy, wish I had done it sooner. Finding the part was easy, using the parts diagram. Rep was nice and confirmed the right part. Shipping was fast, and price was reasonable.