Oven light and dsiplay did not work but the oven did
Turned off power to the oven I removed the three screws holding the front panel on, then tilted it slightly and removed it. Then gently pulled the three wiring clips off the posts and set the panel down. Removed the 4 screws holing the dispay with a 1/4 " nutdriver and replaced the screen and reversed the procedure. Turned the power on and it worked!!
I followed other postings about this repair. It was easy. Open oven door, remove 4 screws that secure oven in the cabinet. Slide oven out a few inches. I thought it would be too heavy for me, but it wasn't. Remove 4 screws along the underside of where the clock panel sits. Have the oven door open, look up and you will see the four screws. Lift up and off for the glass front of the clock area. Undo the 4 sets of wire connections. They just snap in and out. Lay the glass on a towel, remove the clock assembly with a nut driver, replace with new clock assembly and reverse the instructions. When putting the glass panel back on, make sure you hook it over the top ledge. I missed that and after I replaced the 4 screws, I realized the top was not secure. Don't forget to kill the circuit breaker while working on this.
My friend actually replaced this but it was really quick and easy. If I'd had to do it myself, I think I could have because it came with the simpilist step-by-step directions! The best part of all was that I ordered it online on Monday and had it on Tuesday....during Christmas week!! Unbelievable service. Will definitely recommend this company to anyone needing any appliance parts!
Removed 4 screws that hold the clock assembly panel in place. Removed the defective part and replaced it with the new part. The wiring connectors were almost impossible to incorrectly connect. Easy and saved $ 100
It was nice to be able to find this site and see that my problem was the same as others and they had all solved it with replacing the control module. So I ordered the part. Received it. Removed the 4 screws on the panel, then removed the connectors, then removed the bolts holding the control panel on the board. Replaced control panel and hooked it all back up. Very easy and was working in 15 minutes.
The display belongs to the convection oven. We still could use the oven because we knew how all the buttons and beeps worked, but we replaced the control module because we couldn't sell the house without it. Here's how to replace the module: - Remove the bezel on the microwave above the oven (4 screws on the sides). - Now you can remove four up-facing screws on top of the control panel. Don't unwire the panel, just lay it face-down on the topmost oven shelf, as one of the others above advised. - Looking at the back of the clock module, remove the two connectors. The larger one is difficult to pull. Just force each end gently straight up with a flat screwdriver. - Remove the screws holding the clock in place. They're at the two ends. - Swap the clocks and put everything back. I bought this module from PartSelect because of all the customer feedback you see here. It gave me the confidence to do it myself.
Removed two screws, unplugged the old unit, plugged in the new, screwed the new in. Job done. Would have been less than five minutes if I hadn't kept dropping the screws.
Husband got on partselect.com and read reviews, we ordered a long oven sensor kit. When it came in the mail, I took it out and look at it, decided I could probably switch the part.... and so I did. Easy Breezy ... and it worked well
Oven temperature lagging set temperature by almost 100F
Removed frame to cabinet lag screws Slid oven out of cabinet (required because wire harness could not be pulled through inside of oven) Removed two screws holding attaching sensor inside oven Uncoupled wire harness Installed new sensor in reverse order
Unfortunately, neither the new bake element or sensor fixed the problem, so I just ordered the more expensive control board -- hope that does it.
I slide the oven out from the counter and unpluged it. I removed all the oven racks. I then removed the machine screws that held the sheet metal that covered the back of the unit. This made it a lot easier to disconnect the long oven sensor wire and put the wire through the insulation. I removed the two screws on the inside of the oven that held the sensor onto the inside rear wall of the oven. The old sensor did not test too bad but the temperature is reaching the set temperature. I still had to adjust the oven temp up ten degrees using the control panel. I have learned that it takes a few cycles of the element going off and on during the warming to reach the desired set temperature. One more issue is that the buzzer goes off signaling that the set temperature has been reached when it has not. When I set it for 350 F the buzzerr goes off at 280 F and I have a good oven thermometer. I own three oven thermometers and they all read the same. We use to have nothing but Maytag appliances but no more. We have had issues with Maytag front loading washers and ranges. PartSelect is great. Good prices and fast delivery.