Stove is over 50 years old, all knobs were broken or worn
Went to a local appliance parts store and could find only black knobs--there were two kinds--one $3 each, the other $8 each. Both kinds looked AWFUL so I went on line and found partselect.com which had suitable knobs at a very reasonable price, ordered them and they were shipped the next day. Who could ask for anything more? The service was terrific.
Since removing the burner valve would disable the cooktop, I ordered the valve first. Unfortunately the valve could not be removed because the screw that hold it in place was frozen to the valve and manifold. I finally had to cut the screw off with a hacksaw. Since the screw is a special screw, substitutions did not work, so I had to order the screw and pay shipping a second time. These screws should be included with the valve. Anyway, the hacksaw did some slight damage to the manifold so that the screw did not seal off properly. I had to use a Dremel tool to smooth the surface and then use fiberglass to coat the surface to seal any scratches or potential leaks. I screwed the screw in after applying the fiberglass resin to the manifold surface while the resin was still pliable. This seemed to seal the manifold off so that there is no leak, but it does make me nervous. Because of having to reorder for the additional part, the range top took almost a week to repair and could not be used during that time all because the screw was not included with the burner valve. Also a screw with a larger head would have allowed a larger wrench to be used and the screw could have been removed easily. The screw head was so small that it rounded off from the wrench making it more difficult to remove.
I slid the range out about 8 inches from the wall, and having unplugged the range and looked at the diagram from the Parts Select site, I used a mirror and screwdriver to remove the screws holding the small rear cover. From there I removed the one screw holding the spark module and that way I was able to hold the old and new one side by side to move the wires. Reversed the process, easy peasy.
Burner knob appeared to have been accidentally melted by placing a hot pot on top of it.
I took the melted knob off, located the part # went online and found this site. I immediately found the correct burner knob, ordered it, and it came very quickly to my home! I just popped it right on the cooktop, and it's as good as new.
Gas knobs on the cooktop had been melted by a hot frying pan placed on them by mistake.
Ordered new knobs from PartSelect. I ordered the wrong part. The young lady I spoke to not only quickly arranged for a return and refund but offered to order the correct parts which were received and now the stove looks like new.
The burner grate pads were worn out and my stove top was getting scratched.
Removed what was left of the old burner grate pads and put in the new ones. They are incredibly hard to impossible to find in local stores. Thank goodness for PartSelect.com!!!!
After the pad broke off, the stem that holds it in place had to be drilled out. Instructions said to reinstall new pads with ATV to hold them in place. Note original pads were .125" thick while replacements were only .040" causing the grate to set on the burner, not the pads.The fix was to only partialy install the new pads and fill the gap with ATV. I reinstalled the grates after the 24 hour cure period, and so far its holding up. Note the pads are not on the drawing on the internet site. but the service rep was able the recommend the part number that I used.
This was remove and replace of burner valve on a rangetop stove. Removed front pannel of stove. Removed lower panel support. Removed ignition/spark material/peice (slides right off). Unscrewed valve form underneath through access hole, and unscrewed gas connection on top. Removed and eplaced with new valve and reassembled everything in order. Fairly straight forward.