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Posted by james on February 26, 2009, 1:28 am
I have had a closer look and the oven control or clock which is fried.
It is all made of transistors and printed circuits. So for 300$ for
the clock and $200 for the convection oven element and fan I can buy a
new stove. Now isn't that just the most green solution a manufacture
can design to have a burnt out element send you back to buy another
stove after 4 and half years. What ever happened to the idea of a
fuse that burns out before the stove costs the consumer 500 just in
parts.
On Sat, 21 Feb. 2009 07:39:26 -0800 (PST), michael.s.davis@us.army.mil
wrote:
show/hide quoted text
>On Feb 8, 3:22 pm, ja...@uvvm.uvic.ca wrote:
>> We have this 5 year old glass top range with convection oven.
>> The element of the convection oven burnt out and none of the oven
>> elements work.The digital control panel is not operational, it is
>> blank. There appears to be no resets on the back and everything looks
>> fine. Is there a reset anywhere or a reset mode on the control panel?
>> Thanks
>The same thing happened to my range, almost exactly (timeframe and
>everything). With some investigation I found that the control panal's
>circuit board had a short and fried the connection to the temp sensor
>for the oven.
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> The element of the convection oven burnt out and none of the oven
> elements work.The digital control panel is not operational, it is
> blank. =A0There appears to be no resets on the back and everything looks
> fine. =A0Is there a reset anywhere or a reset mode on the control panel?
> Thanks