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Roger Shoaf Roger Shoaf is offline
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Default Need Appliance suggestions


"Bob-tx" wrote in message
. ..


From the sound of it, do you think ours is worth repairing.

Thanks, Bob


An electric stove is easy. You have only three things that can fail.

1] the wires or the connections.

2] the controller

3] the burner

Most of the time you will have 2 large burners and two small burners.

First try swapping the known good burner with the suspect burner.

If the known good burner works in the previous bad burner position then the
element is bad and you only need a new element.

If the suspect burner works in the different position, then you know both
elements are good.

Now you can check the controller and the wires with a volt meter.

At full power setting (high) the socket to the burner should be getting
240V. If it does then the socket itself is probably shot. If it doesn't,
then check the out put from the control. Should be 240V (with knob set to
high) if not then check the input to the control. here you should have
three wires when you connect between two of them you should read 240V and
when you connect between the other two you should get 120V.

With these tests you should have quickly isolated the bum part.

--
Roger Shoaf
If you are not part of the solution, you are not dissolved in the solvent.