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Baking heat element burned out
Removed oven racks removed 2 screws & pulled the element forward & disconnected the old element by wiggling the snap on connecters put in new element connected the snap on wires pushed it back in place & put both screws back in done in 10-15 minutes ??
1. Switched the oven power off. 2. Tried unscrewing the two screws in the rear of the oven but they were too tight. Used a power screw driver to unscrew the bottom element. 3. Pulled element out and disconnected the two wires. 4. Attached the two wires to the new bake element and fastened it with the two screws. 5. Switched the oven power on. 6. Tested the oven with good results!
1. Loosened 2 sensor mounting screws and removed them. 2. Tripped range circuit breaker to off. 3. Pulled out the range but left gas connected. 4. Loosened the 4 screws on RH side of the top back panel and carefully pried that side of the panel open. 5. Using fingers, threaded the sensor's wiring harness through insulation and into the oven. 6. Unplugged old probe. 7. plugged in new probe. 8. tugged wiring harness back through insulation behind the oven. 9. Using 2 screws removed in 1 above, mounted new sensor. 10. Repositioned top back panel and fastened it in place. 11. Shoved range back in. 12. Tripped range circuit breaker to on. 13. Reset clock. 14. Set oven to 450 for test tun. 15.
Watching the video showed an easy, unscrew and screw back on process while connecting the wires back. It was really that simple. Once it was complete (not even 10mins), plugged it back in, and its been working great since.
Finally figured out after many months that all I needed to do was to get online and order the part. Part quickly arrived and within seconds I was back in business.
Really a no brainer, but I do have to say that PartSelect customer service is excellent. My part was located and on it's way within a day and arrived a couple of days later.
Oven was not heating up to the set temperature. Stopped around 180-200F.
Removed 2 screws holding old temperature sensor inside the oven and gently pulled out the wire till the connector came through the hole. Disconnected old probe and attached new one. Fished the wire back in the hole and replaced the two screws. Then followed the operating instructions for calibrating the oven. Ended up setting it +5 degrees. So far, works great.
WELL, I ordered 2 of the tray drive bushings, thank God, because 1 shaft was too short. AND wouldn't even reach the glass tray, although part numbers were identical. So, I took the old broken drive bushing and sanded off the broken end, turned it upside down and glued the new bushing to it. Reaches the glass tray perfectly now, and as long as I don't put overweight bowls of water etc on it, it may last longer this time,, the drive bushings don't really go on the gear as well as they should-length wise- and any weight that stalls the turntable puts a tremendous strain on the plastic notched part of the bushing shaft
Moved the stove away from the wall, unhooked the electric cord and the gas pipe. In the oven, undid the two screws holding the probe. Removed two screws and removed the electrical cover panel from the stove back, disconnected the quick connect to the probe and pulled the probe from the oven. Reversding the proceedures, put the new probe into the oven, hooked up the quick connect and replaced the electrical panel cover. From the front, reinstalled the probe with the two screws, reconnected the gas and the power cord and put the stove back into position. It works just fine now!
Googled the problem and found Oven Temperature Sensor and Main Terminal Block to be the most likely problems. Turned out to be neither. No parts were needed. Oven has a thermal overload switch on the rear upper left. Thermal overload needed re-set. To do so you have to remove the oven, remove the back and press the red button on thermal overload. Biggest challenge was figuring out how to remove the oven. Even with the installation manual it was not easy to fgure out. The instructions are misleading. You need a special tool. I used two hacksaw blades as a substitute, and slid them in to release the clips. Once you figure out how to get the oven out the rest is simple.