I never realized there were so many parts. I carefully took the Ice Bucket and Ice Crushing Assembly apart and laid all items in order, but once it went back together, I fear I did something out of order. Although the ice is now rust free, the ice moving assembly and crusher makes too much noise. I will be required to take it all apart and figure out which part I put together in the wrong order. I could use a diagram that gives the correct blade and spacer order...
Icemaker waterline leaking inside by the grommet where the water line comes in the refrigerator . First removed the water line from grommet . Then removed grommet by hand from the fridge. Last, reversed prodedure.
The existing auger was rusty and made the ice taste bad.
Removed the screws holding the faceplate. Then couldn't change out the auger so needed to remove all of the other screws in the unit and fully disassemble the icemaker unit. Should have marked the parts as I took them apart as I needed to find a parts diagram on-line to reassemble. Not sure that I put them back together right as the unit will not dispense whole ice cubes as it did previously.
I found instructions on the web about how to do this repair, so I ordered the part with confidence. But the instructions simply said "pull out the old switchlight". That was actually somewhat difficult as the clip on the side intended to hold the part in was stubborn. I eventually used a utility to slice off the clip. From that point, it was just a matter of plugging in the new switchlight , which was very simple.
I took the ice maker tray out and dumped the ice and then removed 4 screws to take the plastic front off the drawer. I then took 4 more screws out to remove auger assembly. I could now unscrew the broken nut and replace it with the new one and put the snap ring and washer back in place and then put everything back together. Done Had I had my lathe running at the time I would have made this part out of aluminum instead of the new one and original that is out of plastic which is why it did not last.
It was really easy. I removed my drawers out. (They were kidn of sitting on the base and the glass because the rail broke). All I had to do was unscrew the broken rail and screw in the new one. Good to go in 10 minutes!
I was astonished when my part (PS306943 SLIDE ASM LH (Drawer Slide Rail - left side)arrived the very next day!! In a big box, beautifully wrapped. I got out my screw driver, detached the dead shelf support and screwed in the new one. Oh it's so very nice to have the fridge working again, and so soon. Hooray for Part select.com The best thing since sliced bread. Jill
After years of storing our drinks on the bottom shelf, one of the rails holding up the crisper finally broke. That then broke the rail to the shelve below the crisper. After checking other websites, i came across this one. I liked how it gave me a picture of where the parts go, with the part number, that I could easily cross reference when i ordered. That was very handy. I placed the order on a Wednesday, and the parts were on my front porch when I came home Friday. That is fast service. I will definitely be coming back again.
drawer did not open or close properly due to broken slider
Your search engine used a grid for sizing and rotated images of the slider on different axes so that it was easy to identify for replacement purposes. These sliders tend to look very much alike. I ordered the replacement slider and it arrived the next day. I removed two Phillips head metal screws and replaced the part in less than thirty seconds.
Emptied the ice from tray. Removed the four screws that hold the face plate. Removed the four screws that fasten drive housing to the tray. Slid the drive cup into place at the end of the auger. Made sure the rubber gasket was in place . Replaced the four screw that hold the housing to the tray. Replaced the four screws that hold the face plate. Put some ice cubes in the tray and tested to be sure everything worked properly.
The dispenser water reservoir had a pin hole leak.
1. Turned off the water supply to the refrigerator. 2. Removed the front panel and disconnected the water line to the front left. 3. Removed the left rear (freezer side) panel and disconnected the reservoir from the main water supply input. This was a little tricky to figure out. You must push in the water line at the same time pushing in the coupling. Then pull the line out while keeping the coupling pressed in. 4. Removed the screw that holds the reservoir to the back of the refrigerator. 5. Pulled the old reservoir out and replaced it with the new one. 6. Basically the rest is the reverse of the above. It took a little bit to fish the lines through the original path they came.
Overall this was an easy repair. If I had known how the coupling in step 3 worked this would have been a 15-minute project.
Removed the Ice Maker container. Removed the one screw that held the remnant of the old light shield. Placed the new light shield in place and installed the screw. 5 Minutes from start to finish.