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Door Seal on oven was old, hard and breaking apart.
It was very simple, pull off the old one, then I took some pliers and pulled out the fasteners. Took new gasket from bag and it just snapped into place.
Turn off breaker. Remove knob, pulls off. Pulled stove away from wall. Removed front panel with switches attached. There are screws in front and back. Removed screws that hold switch in place. Transferred wires one at at time to get proper location. Reverse process for reassembly Gary in Ohio
Piece of cake! Took more time to find the screwdriver than it did to replace the element! Unplugged the stove. Removed 2 screws. Pulled the element out about 2" and disconnected the wires on each end (wires are attached to a metal clip that just pushes on to the end of the element. Threw the old element away. Unpacked the new elements. Connected the wires at each end. Pushed element into place and screwed in 2 screws. Plugged oven/stove back in and voila! That's it!
This was a complete no brainer. The easiest repair I have ever done. Take out the old screws, remove element and replace with new one, replace screws. Took less than 5 minutes :)
Worst part of the job was removing the old screws that held the two old rectecles in place for the two burners I repaired. Once the screws were removed cut the wires stripped them and used the porceliean wire nuts provided with the kit. Easy job and good instructions.
Burner would only cook on high setting or not heat up at all.
Shut off power to stove. Moved stove out. Loosened screws in top and middle back of stove and removed cover. Took mental note of color order of each wire and unhooked each wire from old switch and reattached to new switch in exact order of color of wire as original. Remounted cover on back of stove and reattached screws. Turned on power and turned on burner and tested burner for heat. Turned off burner, slid stove back and bingo - done. Saved a lot of money.
I just bought my first condo and sure enough something broke in my oven. I thought "Oh great - I'll need to buy a new one..." After some research and a friend's advice - I was assured that I only needed to replace the broiler element. After researching the issue I googled replacement parts which led me to this web-site. I was amazed how easy and inexpensive it was for me to replace the part. The directions were easy, simple, and spot-on! The instructions that were provided were easy to follow. I also utilized YouTube instructions as well for additional visual guidance. The shipping was super fast and the element was packaged very well. Thank you so much!
Stove top wouldn't come on. Oven couldn't go higher than low heat
Had a technician from Home Advisor to check the problem out with my Whirlpool Double oven(1 1/2 old). Paid $60 to find the problem. According to the technician problem was control board and cost of labor and parts $465.00 Jumped on Part Select website, placed a question with my stove problem through the chat. Immediately they answered my question and told me the problem was the Terminal Block. Cost of part and shipping $25.00. Replaced it myself and everything works fine. Thank you, Thank you Part Select for your help and honesty.
My wife and I did the repair. The most difficult part was finding the correct replacement part. The store where we bought the stove lied about what part was needed, which cost us a lot of online time before we found the part. UNPLUG THE STOVE or turn off the breaker. We removed the back of the stove, which is two or three pieces, completely. The thermostat is part of the single oven control. This job inclludes replacing the oven thermocouple (temperature sensor) which is a small copper tube about a foot long which is inside the oven itself,held in two spring clips on the left upper side near the front. You install the new thermocouple, which comes with and is attached to, the replacement thermostat from the back and top of the stove. Unplug the top burner elements and remove them, along with the drip pans. Remove the single screw that holds the connector for each burner to the stove top. Then lift the front of the stove top and remove it. Remove the screws holding the inner top of the stove. It has a tab on each side that slides under the flange of each side of the stove, so you must remove all the screws from the back of one side so you can swing it out a bit. Then you can remove the inner top, Under that is insulation covering the top of the oven. Remove the old thermocuple. It is easier to cut it instead of fishing it all the way back. Just be careful to note how it is installed. Silde the new thermocouple in from the thermostat, under the insulation and through the small hole in the top of the oven box and clip it in place. The clips are flimsy so support them as you remove and install the part. Hold the new thermostat right next to the old one BEFORE you disconnect any wires. Unplug each wire in turn and plug it into the new thermostat before going on to the next wire. Watch for the short wire that connects from the thermostat to the oven indicator light. Then remove the old thermostat and put in the new one. Reverse the steps of the disassembly process to get it all back together. Be sure the insulation holds the thermocouple in the center of the hole mentioned above. That's it. Be careful of the sheet metal parts of the stove; Crosley didn't bother to deburr them and they can give you a nasty cut. Reconnect the power and test. If it all works, maybe you can talk your wife into baking something.
Shipped on timely manner,I will order again from Part Select, installing was a 15 minute job, that what I did, 1 unplugged stove, 2) removed 4 screws, (2 on top bracket and 2 on back) , 3) slide unit out couple inches enough to disconnected the wires from each end of unit and removed old part, installed new unit by reconnecting end wires, pushing unit slowly toward back of oven until wires find it's right position, set it back in place with the 2 screws on top bracket and 2 screws on back, done!!
I marked all wires separately attaching a paper strip with tape to each connector and made a separate small chart where each wire should attach to the bottom of the switch. On this particular model there are three or four colored wires and two have both double and single connections to the same switch so the small chart told me where a single or double connector would attach even if I lost the attached taped information. Then since wires were marked separately, even if paper was lost I could still proceed with no outside help. I had the luxury of leaving the breaker shut off while waiting for part to arrive. After arrival which was only a couple of days, I raised the stove top and let it rest on a small board maybe 1.5 feet so it would keep itself up. The under assembly was already taken loose before so I just removed the broken switch taking all wires loose, which are already marked and replaced the switch with the new one. Gently placing each wire at its place after removing the tape for that connection. After all four wires were connected I held the switch up in place while screwing the two set screws into place. Then reattached the bottom assembly cover and then let the top down and reattached the four screws, one in each stove hole to attach the stove top to the under assembly. I then reattached one element and flipped the breaker switch on. No sound or problems so I tried the element and all is well. Reattached all elements and the project is done. PartSelect.com made this repair easy and economical. Replacement would have been 4x the part and shipping. Thanks.
Removed the large lower back panel of range (6-8 phillips screws) which holds upper control back panel in place. Removed upper control back panel (2 screws), exposing infinite switch electrical connections. At front face of control panel, removed (pulled off) control knob, exposing 2 phillips screws holding switch in place. (NOTE: A sleeve is on the switch arm or maybe remains inside the control knob). Look for this sleeve. Without it, the knob will NOT seize the switch rotary arm. Removed each wire connection individually, one at a time, installing it in the proper position on the new switch. Reverse all procedures to put things back together. A very simple, straight-forward operation.
not to offend anybody but what i learned on prior posts helped alot.. 1. remove unit and unplug. 2. remove door by opening to 45 degree angle and lifting door face towards you. 3. remove back panel to unit.e. 4.unscrew burner element from back inside of oven. 5.gently pry clip off each off burner element from rear of unit. Pull gently towards you. 6.unscrew support from inside oven. 7. remove old element and just reverse directions to reinstall.