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Burner igniter needed to be replaced
Assumed the entire top of the range would have to be lifted off. Removed the three screws inside the top of the over door and then noticed the two screws holding the dish around the burner. They were tight and required WD-40 and then a sharp tap and came off. Important: Notice the direction your old igniter is plugged into the wire. It is not clear and can go on either way.
Simiple repair. Determined drip pan size (sm, med., lg.) removed 2 screws holding drip pan, placed gasket around new drip pan and installed. Repaired took less than 5 minutes.
Removed the two screws holding the porcelain burner bowl. Disconected the electric igniter by removing the "w" clip on the underside of the bowl. Then disconnected the igniter from the electric supply cord. Reverse these directions using the new urner bowl. Really easy.
Replacement cook-top, had natural gas orifices, needed propane
Three were simple screw out and replace with a nut driver. The warming burner had a smaller opeining which was too large for the nut driver. Had to remove shielding aroound it first. Simple, job. My mother did the last one.
Pulled off burner grates, burner, unscrewed burner bowl, removed clip from igniter and wire, then put it all back together. Was very easy, and the stove looks like new again.
PartSelect is very good with amazing shipment times. The kjpart arrived much sooner than expected.
No way to adjust mixer tube assembly so the mounting holes will line up with the holes in the burner bowl. Mounting holes in bowl should be slotted to prevent future problems. Had to finally bend the mixer tube mounting bracket enough to get one bowl on. It also made the procelin break on that bowl because the screw put to much pressure on the side of the hole.
Igighter mounting hole out of position just enough to prevent the burner head from sliding over it and sitting on the mixer tube correctly.
I solved this problem by fileing the opening slot for the igniter. Even with the igniters being just a little out of alignment from the original position they still light well.
I did not get new gaskets for the burner bowl but would reccommend that you get them.
Scratches in drip pan from improper cleaning, spills during cooking.
The replacement part not right size for the porcelain cone for gas. Had to unscrew 2 screws remove the cone, after unclicking gas wire. The gas spreader did not fit with the cone in place.
took me a a while to find my problem. One burner would not spark to ignite gas burner. From Part Select website I noticed the part that was the problem from the parts diagram. I did not realize it was related to ignition until I saw that. Easy and cheap to fix after that.
I received a defective part from PartsSelect.com. After contacting their Customer Service, they promptly replaced the part for no charge at all. I am very, very pleased with PartsSelect.com and recommend them to all "home mechanics".
The bowl was replaced by removing two screws, removing the igniter wire, clip, and igniter. Reverse to re-assemble. I would recommend replacing the gasket at the same time.
Real simple to do. Simply remove the two screws holding the bowl and disconnect the electric wire. Obviously first pull the power cord to prevent being shocked. Re-attach the power cord and and screw the bowl tight. Plug in the power cord.
Ok - I LOVE THIS COMPANY!! When I read the other blogs I was a little confused. Ok first choosing the right drip pan for my gas stovetop was a little confusing because there was a cheaper one that look just like mine. I didn't have the model number - so I WOULD have guessed on it. Later I took my stovetop apart and found model number. Found that MY model required the more expensive drip pans. I think this will help people.... (1) Both type of drip pans looked just alike, but the space between the ignitor and the flame was different. The closer one wouldn't have worked. (2) They were categorized as small medium and large drip pans. BUT - they all had the same dimension: 9 inches. The difference is made in the flame area. My stove top has one small flame area, one large and two mediums, that's how you determine which size you need. (3) The ignitor, when you take it off - nothing shows whether the little white ignitor breaks apart or not, and HOW you get it out. Once you remove the little wire holding it to the drippan, don't try to pull apart the white ignitor, it doesn't come apart. Mine had rusty residue attaached, making it hard to pull through. But when I removed the crusty stuff the white thing popped through the hole. (I called a REP to see if the white thing tore apart or not and they weren't sure. So maybe this will help some other woman who is wondering.) This was ABSOLUTELY the easiest and most cost effective way to have a nearly BRAND NEW stove top. And I'm pleased with myself that I did it without any help.