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Sounds like the circuit breaker for the oven is still tripped, even though you reset it. What happens is the breaker is only supplying 110 volts to the clock and electronics instead of 220 volts for the heating elements. The smartest fix is to replace the circuit breaker.
Go to the power panel of your home and locate the circuit breaker for the oven. Turn this breaker on and off several times then check the oven controls. If this restores normal operation, then I would replace the breaker. If the breaker trips instantly every time you try to reset it then suspect the heating element and the thermostat. When a heating element shorts, it can ruin the contacts inside the thermostat.
Check the circuit breaker for the oven. 220 volts are necessary for the heating element. 110 volts for the light and clock controls. The 220 volt breaker looks like two side by side breakers with their trip levers joined. Sometimes one will trip without tripping the other. Try resetting the breaker or better yet replace it.
First of all check your breakers. Some ovens display all characters if you aren't getting a full 240v. When you check it may look like it's not tripped but turn them off and on anyhow (there will be a double breaker). If you don't have a full 240v the burners or oven won't heat up. The other problem is they may have dropped the oven and cracked or joggled a plug to your control panel. Moving companies are insured for this so you need to contact the company and let them know what happened. Usually they will either have it fixed for you or get you a new oven. Good Luck.
First make sure you didn't trip a breaker. You could have power for the electronics on one side of the 220V and that is why the clock still works. Turn off the breaker and then back on even if it looks on. If it does this again you have a sever problem that will require a service call. If the breaker is tripping it could be other than the oven and if so a new one will work ok unless itsin your wiring.
If this helps you please ratre me accordingly Good luck.
Sounds like the controller board has failed, assuming a circuit breaker has not tripped or fuse has not blown. If all you do is reset the clock, and then it looses time, regardless of using the microwave, then it points to the clock/controller board. If this only happens when you use the microwave portion for a few seconds, I would be suspicious of the microwave circuit, where there are several components that could cause the failure.
This I hope will be an easy solution for you. I think you have a circuit breaker tripped or a fuse if you have a fuse panel.. I am guessing you have an old fuse panel. When you have a fuse blown on a 230 volt appliance and you turn a swith on (like your knob) it feeds back to other circuits on the 120 circuits and will make it do crazzzy things, like making lights and clocks work..Regardless if you have fuse or breaker you dont have the 240 volt to run the range..You only have one120 volt leg powering your stove.
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