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No freezer light
Unplugged the fridge, and opened the freezer. Unscrewed the light panel, small screwdriver. Removed the plastic bracket. Part was frozen and I broke one of the plastic mounts. Do not do this as I am not sure if I will have to live with my cable twist tie kludge or I can get another plastic bracket. Light board is just the PCB. You need to remove the old PCB and install the new one- remember the orientation and the fact that the plastic mount piece has specific sides you can identify by the width of the slots. This is for all the other women like me. Thanks.
First: Remove all shelf’s and drawers from fridge inside that were on the way of the water tank Second: Pull the fridge from the wall Turn off the water supply: Unplugged the power supply Third: Remove the cardboard cover at bottom of the fridge on the back for better access to the water pipes From the front remove the toe kick for better access at the water pipes Disconnected the water pipe at the front left side, use a rag or paper towel to hold the water that may drip ( bigger pipe) Remove the covers on the top of the water tank inside the fridge Disconnected the water pipe at the back left side ( smaller pipe) Unscrew the water tank (two screws) Pull the water tank out with the water pipes attached Fourth: Install the new water tank assembly , make sure the pipes goes on the hole at the right side and reaches the from and back Connect pipes until the line that shows on the pipes Screw back the new water tank Put the protections back on the top Plug the fridge and open the water supply to make sure there is no water leaks The water is ready to be use
1. I unplugged the refrigerator/ freezer 2. Turned off water supply 3. Removed the screws that held the cardboard skirt in place 4. Unplugged the water tube from the push connect 5. Removed the screws around the water inlet to the ice maker 6. Remove the water fill tube 7. Install new water fill tube and put all the screws and plates back where they go
The rubber gasket had torn, and super glue only provided a temporary solution.
1. Emptied the crisper pan, 2. Removed it from the refrigerator, 3. Flipped it upside down, 4. Removed the old one by pulling it off, 5. Replaced it with the new OEM part. and 6. Reversed the process.
I replaced the three sensors, 2 in the freezer 1 in the refrigerator. This was rated as the most common problem. Did not fix the problem. I then checked the ohms on the new sensors then the old sensors they were all within .5 of each other. So I got smart and went down the list of causes on their list. I emailed partselect and asked what the parts should read. They replied with that information and it turned out to be the voltage converter on the compressor. I ordered the part on friday payed for overnight delivery and it arrived tuesday. This as you can imagine makes me angry. But the part was easy to install and my refrigerator started working right away. I would advise anyone with this problem to start at the top of the problem list use a multi meter check everything on the list and only replace part or parts that don't come up to standards. This will save time and money and hopefully fix the problem the first time as you are not switching out parts and hoping that it solves the problem.
ice bucket support (glide) had broken allowing misalignment of rotor which then broke.
Removed ice bucket and emptied it, storing ice cubes temporarily in another container; Removed broken support and replaced with new. Removed rotor/crusher assembly from ice bucket assembly, replaced broken rotor (other vendor), reassembled ice bucket, filled with stored cubes and reinstalled in freezer.
Removed back wall cover over coil. Defrost all ice with a hair dryer. Cut white wires and replaced Temperature Sensor. It has been working for a week and no trouble at this time. If you have this system on your GE refrigerator do this before replacing the motherboard. I must admit I was thinking that was the trouble. Motherboard was replaced after 5 years old now 5 years later my thinking is this a 5 year problem. So try the Temperature Sensor.
after replacing the door seal, I couldn't get the new seal to close and stay closed, so I replaced the closing arm and spring. The door will close now but not tightly and it's loosing cold air. So I made and patented a wooden block to put behind the freezer door handle and the refrigerator door handle to keep the doors closed. Available in black, white and natural tan. (just kidding about the patented part, but not the block)