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oven coil caught on fire and broke in half!
I turned off the main power! Then unscrewed the back cover unhooked the wires and unscrewed the coil inside of the oven and pulled it out. My 10yr old son and I measured it and went online to order the part. I first did go into BestBuy and they didn't have the part (But they tried to sale me a new oven!) LOL Now who said a newly divorced mom couldn't fix her own oven! My Tech Support skills came in handy! Women Rock! LOL
Shorted out the burner... fat gets into the receptors on these old stoves.
The only hard part about putting in a new terminal block (and this time I had to replace the burner too, because that fried too) is stripping the stove wires, because that thermal insulation is very hard to get off. Otherwise, it's simple. In this case, I had already replaced this one (sigh), so had already cut & stripped the wires, so it was all easy. Frankly, the sane thing to do is buy a new stove, but wife is too cheap.
First unplugged it. Then removed everything in side for easy access. Took screws out 2 of them. Had to pull to removed elemnet . That took a while. Should have tried removing other screws or at less loosen them. It went in easy. And lift off we had red burner. hey..
First turned off the power to the stove at the breaker panel, thenI removed the two screws that hold the element in place. I then pulled the element out about 3 inches and disconnected the two wires. Disconnecting/reconnecting the "clips" was the only difficult part because they did not slip off/on easily. Replaced the element in the oven, replaced the screws...good to go!
Best part of buying from Parts Select was that they shipped the part the same day I ordered it, which was the Friday after Christmas. Competitor would not have shipped till the following Monday and we needed the oven ASAP!
Pulled out bottom drawer and showed my 13 yr old boy that the spring needed to go back in same hole, then he did the rest. It was so easy, even a 13 yr old can do it.
insulation replacement due to cooking oil spillage
raised hood, removed four screws that hold the top plate. placed in new insulation and replace top plate. ran oven at 500 degrees for 20 minutes. all OK.
Safety first: Turn range circuit breaker to off position. Turn a surface unit [burner] to the on position ,if no light exists power has been removed. Turn surface unit to off position. To remove bake unit. With a 1/4 socket driver remove two self tapping screws and gently pull out on the bake unit until you can access the slide on terninals. Careful lenth of wire is limited. Remove slide on terminals two each [2] . Install new bake unit in reverse order . Restore power
Turn off power at the circuit breaker before working on electric thing.
Removed oven door and shelves for free access to element. Unscrewed the old element, pulled it out, removed the clips and removed the element. Reversed these steps to install the new element. Tested the element to ensure it worked.
Took door off of hinge Removed 6 screws from bottom of door Removed glass Removed screws from side of door Removed door from frame Replaced the end caps using exisiting screws Put door back together in reverse order Pretty easy but simple instructions would have made it a 15 minute job instead of 30
Really easy. 1) Pulled up on oven door and removed it. 2) Removed lower drawer to access springs. 3) Pay attention to which hole the springs are attached under the oven. 4) Remove spring with Needle Nose Plier. If you remove by hand, the spring will likely cut your finger....like mine. 5) Unscrew 3 screws of old hinge assembly. 6) Reverse process when placing new assembly in place.