Followed the very clear instructions written by others who also had a combination microwave/oven. Complication encountered because my oven is built into the cabinetry right next to a built-in refrigerator that protrudes by several inches. No room to get a screwdriver in to loosen the screws for the faceplate of the microwave on one side in order to remove the oven's display panel. Luckily had just the tip of a Phillips head and used pliers to carefully turn it just a bit with each turn until screw came out. Also didn't have the right tool to loosen the clock display little hex screws and used pliers for that as well. It was tough to get two of the electrical connections out--had to be careful wiggling them free so as not to break the wires. Finally used a tiny little flathead screwdriver to gently work each side up a bit until the whole connection could be pulled out. Took longer than it needed to.
LED clock faded then black,oven worked but no clock
First: my problem was with the oven. Turn power off at breaker,should be one of the largest breakers, 30 or 40 amp. type.Then open door look up under LED readout you will see 4 phillip head screws, remove them,then lift LED section upward and off.You may want/need someone to hold this section.Then unplug the wires by pulling firmly upward and off of the LED plastic box. The box is held on by 4 hex nut screws, unscrew and remove box,install new LED display in reverse order. turn power back on.Set clock. Your done.Sounds like a long project but I actually had two ovens to do.Total time for the first oven was 12 minutes.
The display went dim and then out. Common problem - most in development have had to do- design flaw.
Open oven, Remove the 4 screws located on top leading edge of the oven. Pull the plugs from the pannel and then using the nut driver remove screws. Reattach plugs- note do not force. Two people- one to hold the pannel while you do change out.
Removed 4 screws from the front panel. Disconnected the wiring harness at three locations. The printed circuit popped out of the framework. Exhanged with a new one, and reversed procedure to reinstall.
Removed the four screws that hold the oven assembly in the cabinet, slid it part way out and let the front edge rest on the kitchen stool (these puppies are heavy!)
Removed bezel from around the microwave, removed screws that hold the microwave in, and slid it out.
removed the microwave tracks, and removed the top panel from the oven.
remove four screws that hold the timer to the front panel, unplugged three connectors, and remove timer.
Plug the three connectors back in; watch out, the pins bend easily!
Re-install the four screws; the top two are hard to see. A magnet on the nutdriver helps.
Re-install top panel, microwave tracks.
slide the microwave in, re-install bezel.
Heave the whole thing back into the cabinet, and shim to level; important step! otherwise the door won't close right.
Re-install the four screws that keep it in the cabinet. Not needed for strength, just in case gravity decides to stop operating.
Important; don't forget to cut off power before removing, don't forget to plug the microwave back in (ask me how I know) or you'll be pulling it out again.
Easy job except for two invisible screws, heavy components, and sharp-edged sheet metal. Probably saved more than $200 on service charges, between saving on parts and labor.
First I removed the four screws from the control panel. This was done by opening the oven door. Lifted up on the control panel and removed it. Then unplulged the three conecters to the control board. Removed the four screws holding the board in place. Put the new board in, connected three plugs, put the control panel back on and attached it with the four screws from under neath.Simple!!!!!!!
Number one: trip the breaker on the oven. Next, I removed four screws from the bottom of the front display panel. Then, unhooked the panel and gently placed it on the counter next to it. Then I un-plugged each of the three inputs and plugged them into the new component. I then unscrewed the four hex screws from assembly and removed the old unit. I reversed the process and screwed it back in, and when I turned on the circuit breaker, everything worked as advertised. Total time: less than 15 minutes.
After reading how the others did this repair, I told Nancy, no sweat, you can do it. We removed the four screws from under the panal, removed the panal, unpluged the wire leads and laid the unit on a towel. We then removed the four nuts that held the clock assembly and exchanged the old for the new. Reversed the proceedure and it worked. Don't forget to turn the power off before the repair.
I removed 4 screws on the under side of the glass that held the clock assy. removed the glass panel and removed 3 connectors off the back. Removed the 4 screws holding down the clock assy with a nut driver. Put the new part in place and it was back together in 3 min. Easy Peezy I would of felt foolish hireing a repairman to do this job....
shut power off to wall oven,open oven door & with phillips screw driver remove 4 screws. lift clock display up & out,unplug three harness's & remove.unscrew the four 5/16 bolts and remove and replace the light display.
Open oven door, remove four phillips screws, lift off the faceplate. Remove circiut board containing the readouts with nutdriver unplug two connectors and install the new board. Very happy with results and saved a bundle !!
I removed the four screws that hold the control panel in place, unpluged the three wire connectors, and removed the clock assembly by removing four screws that hold it in place. Next I replaced the four screws that hold the clock in place, pluged in the wire connectors, and replaced the control panel. It was a very simple task.
Repair was just exactly like a dozen I read before I ordered the part. Turn off breaker. Remove 4 phillips head screws on the bottom of the clock face. Tilt out from the bottom, take out 4 screws with 1/4" nutdriver, unplug 3 wiring harnesses. Replace in reverse order and turn the power back on.