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Inoperative heating element
Opened circuit breaker, unscrewed old element, disconnected old heating element wire, attached new element wire, screwed new element into place, closed circuit breaker. tested element for heat.
I pulled down the wire around the glass cover. . . Released on end of the wire from its holder being careful to not let the glass cover drop. Unscrewed the bulb and replaced with replacement. Easy, easy.
My daughter told me here oven had quit and ask my advice. I saw where the element was burnt. Took out 2 screws unkooked the wires. I was unable to get help at the local Appl repair store so I went to internet to parts select.com I put in model # and had the part within 3 days put it back in and worked fine.
broil element burned out in my 26 year old wall oven
First, turn off the breaker to the oven, then turn off the service disconnect to the whoe house. I play safe.) Open the door, pull out the oven racks to allow space. Using a Phillips screw driver, unscrew the screws near the front of the oven to loosen the element. Using both hands, pull the element straight out of the holes in the back of the oven, where you will find electric wires attached to them. Pull the ends of the element off the wire connectors. Throw it away. Get you new element, attach the element ends to the connectors. Raise it up to the top of the oven and screw the screws back in to the holes in the top of the oven. You are finished. (The only reason this took me 30 minutes is because I am an old 79 year old granny and can't bend so well, or see so well. I had to use a little acrylic paint on my finger tips to mark the screw holes, it was taking too long to find them the old way, by feel.) GG
Four screws hold the broiler element. I removed the two at the top, then removed the two screwed to the back keeping the element in place. I slowly pulled the element forward and used alligator clips to keep the wire connectors from falling back behind the oven. I disconnected the wires from the broken element and replaced it with the new element. I removed the alligator clips. I screwed the two screws on the back and the two on top and I was finished. Problem solved.
Unscrewed 4 screws holding element. Disengaged one wire, but 2nd one was separated while pulling through rear wall. Could not grasp the wire from the front. Then unscrewed 4 screws along sides of oven to pull casing away from wall cavity. Sat oven on a box while unscrewing 12 rear panel screws. Pulled wire through from back into oven. (Didn't need to do this because new element extended through the rear wall to access from back. Could have reattached wires to new element from the rear, but didn't realize this soon enough.)....two days later reinstalled new broiler element reattaching wires inside the oven and replacing 4 screws holding element in the oven. To replace the back panel I had to lay oven on its face so the holes on back of would fit with the rear panel. Put 12 screws back on. Then pushed oven back into wall cavity and put 4 screws holding oven in place. It is now working!
Cut power off to oven in fuse panel...Removed door from oven, had to use flat edge screwdriver to slide hinge locks into place, Removed all oven grates, Removed left side and right side attachment screws from element, removed burned out element and unhooked wires from burnt element, reconnected wires to replacement element, reinstalled attachment screws, reinstalled oven grates, reinstalled door... Turned power back on to oven, turned oven on to bake, oven heated right up! Easy repair...