I watched the repair video on this site and another on YouTube before I started. The rear panel has a different shape and two additional screws on the bottom edge. The power clip was easy to manipulate. This was an easy fix for a seventy year-old like me!
Following your installation, the old part came out easily, with new part installing easily., oven heat is being regulated properly..with range pulled out for part replacement, got that area cleaned too
Oven stopped heating, error message stated heating element
Very easy. Pulled the stove away from the wall. Used a screw driver to remove the two nuts to release the heat sensor, disconnected the wire, removed the sensor. Inserted the new sensor, plugged back into the circuit. put the two nuts back. Beware, if the first time you put the oven on, if the error message comes back up (mine did) push the cancel/off button, wait a few minutes, put oven back on. System probably needed to reset. Mine worked perfectly after.
Oven igniter would not glow when put on bake. Front knob was broken
Replace the broken knob, with the exact part. Per the video, I unplugged the stove, open the front door of the stove, remove the racks and drip pan below, to expose the igniter component. Removed the two screws holding the unit in. Pull the stove from the wall and removed the shield plate from the rear covering the wire connection. Disconnected the component and pushed the wires though the hole and replaced. Used soap to check the gas connection for leaks before pushing it back in place. Turned it on after remounting. Note: magnetic nut driver is a great tool to use on the mounting screws. Turned it on and saw the glow. Then replace the drip pan and racks.
Unscrewed the feet from the floor. Pried up the range top, removed burners. Unscrewed sides of the range from wooden cabinet it was recessed into. Unplugged range from outlet. Pulled range out into the open. Removed back cover. Discovered that I have the wrong replacement part.
The Igniter seized and the oven would not heat up..the gas would not light.
So....the oven stopped working. I called a local appliance guy and set up an appointment to repair. $90 to travel here. $50 for the part $ labor was about $75 ..then tax. BUT then....I had a moment of clarity. A new Oven/Range/Stove top was about $400. This guy was over $200 to repair a 4-7 yr old stove. So I ordered the part. A resus monkey could have fixed the stove...I really mean it...Easy is an under-statement. I found a tutorial on you tube (how to change an Igniter. Literally 6 screws and unplug the igniter and install the new igniter. Replace the screws and replug in the unit.
the fastener became loose and dropped into the stove
This is a cook stove that is used 5 months a year. We have not fixed it yet because we are now in Florida the stove is in New York. We ordered that part just before we left NY for FL so the repair will be done in June of 2021. George Clark
Ignighter would not light and started smelling natural gas
Igniter is in the back bottom of the oven. I had to take off the top of the broiler compartment which has 3 screws. Unplugged the igniter which has two small screws and used a magnetic nut driver. installed the new one. It took 30-45 minutes.
Simple-pulled range away from wall, unplug from socket. Removed back panel unscrewed thermoses and replace. Put back panel back on plug in, tested temperature setting before sliding range back on place