My Jenn Air 27 inch jmc7000ADB combo wall oven and microwave we bought 11 years ago just failed. The microwave just quit during use. Went dark while it was running... Is there a simple possibility, like a fuse, making it worth paying 150 bucks to have someone come out to take a look at it, or maybe something I could even do myself? or given the age is it more likely to be a fatal failure?
SOURCE: Jenn-Air JMC7000 Microwave Stopped working
take the trim off of the microwave and on the top of the oven on the right side all the way in the back there should be a reset button just like a surge protector.
SOURCE: Microwave on counter making wall oven change
ok the microwave has magnetic fields that may be messing it up only way is to turn microwave off or move it at lease 1 meter away from oven let me know how that goes's for you
SOURCE: jenn-air microwave light bulb
This is an older (Mfgr. May, 1987) microwave oven. Functions perfectly, works an looks good to this day, just no light inside. I searched a couple of websites looking for parts for this unit and appliancepartspros.com provided schematics of the product that I own. From those drawings, it was determined that the microwave oven will have to be slid out of the cabinet above the built-in oven in order to change a $2.37, 40W light bulb. Just a handfull of scrws retaining the oven and exhaust baffles and I'll get it out (onmce the New Year's Eve hangover disappears). The engineer who designed a system like this must have been on an Acid Trip. I haven't looked closely at newer microwave ovens, but I'd have to believe changing a crummy light bulb would have to be made easier than this during the preliminary engineering phase of design.
SOURCE: Display on my Jenn-Air electric wall oven is very dim
douglas9101,
I had the same problem and found the solution on-line.
Replace the C3 capacitor on the dispaly module. (100 UF, 35 volt, high temperature)
The local Jenn Air dealer wanted $211 for a new display module.
I purchased a Cap from a local electronics supply store for 79cents.
The only problem is that you need to have a soldering pencil/iron, a solder ******/wick and a small amount of solder.
Steps I had to take on my oven:
- Flip the AC breaker supplying the oven to off to be save
- remove 3 screws on top and 4 on the bottom of the display panel
- gently pull out the display panel and unplug the 2 cables to the display
- unclip the ribbon cable to the display module
- unclip the module itself by pushing on the 2 black tabs
- locate C3
- unsolder C3 and replace with new Cap- keeping the polarity strip the same as theh old Cap
- reasemble in reverse order.
It took me all of 20 minutes. It may sound difficult but is very easy if you have the tools
Good Luck
K
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