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The switch would not turn off the range. The switch just kept turning but nothing happened.
I removed two screws that held the switch plate together. Then I removed two screws that held the faulty switch to the swtich plate. I then unpluged one wire at a time from the old switch and pluged it into the new switch. Reattached the switch to the switch plate and then reattached the switch plate to the stovetop. Bingo! Everything worked beautifully. It was so easy and I saved ~ $100.00 by doing it myself, as opposed to a quote that I got from a local repairman.
I remove fore screwsfrom the front panel. Then remove two screws to remove the switch and removed the wire plugs then put everything back together again.
Remove cover plate, install new switch, replace cover place. Replace one wire at a time, a pair of needle nose pliers may be helpful. Surprise of this job was that I had a torque screw driver (I think that's what it's called) to remove the switch from the cover plate. These are the screws you'll see after removing the knob. Find that driver before you begin, mine was in the garage and for the life of me, I can't remember why I ever had one in the first place. Thanks for a great web site!
Removed old grease filter,replaced with new grease filter. No tools needed. I ordered the grease filter on Tuesday and it arrived at my door on Wed. Best experience ever ordering a part, I will definitely use Part Select again and have already recommended it to friends.
I removed 2 screws to release the plate that held four the switces. I removed 2 screws to release the bad switch. I removed one wire at a time and connected the to the same post on the new switch, screwed the switch into place and reinsalled the mounting plate. The stove works fine.
2 screws to remove disconnect 220 v power use long nose pliers to transfer 5 female spade terminals use nut driver to r@r shaft nut replace panel with 2 screws Turn on power and test!---OK!
1. Diagnosed problem = switch at fault not element Made a diagram of wire positions on faulty switch 2. Ordered part = remarkable service! Switch arrived in less than 24 hours 3.Installed new switch 4. Tested appliance = success! 5. Saved $150 and a lot of aggravation Terrific site. Excellent help in figuring out and solving the problem. Two thumbs up!
back burn would turn high no mater where you set the control knob.
Well I was just guessing the controll switch was bad so I ordered a new one. So I cut off the power and held the switch close to the old one and changed the wires one at a time matching the connection terminals and cut the power back on and presto it WORKED..The service man wanted to charge me 65.00 dollars just to check it out. I figure I saved about 100.00 dollers plus I learned something.
Very simple---shut off the power, removed six screws, detached five wires, replaced control switch, put everything back together, turned on power and made husband happy!!!
1. Flipped breaker and confirmed no power at cooktop. 2. Removed the Fan grille and removed the two screws holding on the control panel. It tilts up and out to the rear. 3. Unscrewed the 2 screws on top holding old switch to panel. 4. Disconnected the wiring one lead at a time and connected it to the new switch in the same spot. There are 5 wires total and I carefully used needle nose pliers to remove reluctant wires and to adjust connectors if they were loose on new switch 5. Screwed the new switch onto the panel and screwed the panel back onto the cooktop. 6. Tested new switch...worked great.