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I'm sorry, I'm having a bit of difficulty understanding your question. Could you please provide more information or clarify what you are asking for? It seems like you may be asking about the thermal fuse on a GE Trivection JT930S oven, but I am not sure what you are asking for after "where is". Thank you.
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I will first test the Thermal fuse. Its usually inside the unit situated on top of the oven case. The switches are mechanical and can fool around a bit. i would bridge that to test if it works, then replace it if indeed so. Very inexpensive
Parts #: W10317343
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Parts #: W10354052
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Part #: W10317347 front LED board $230 at sears
Many ovens have a bi-metal thermal fuse-also called a thermal limit switch-that protects the oven from overheating. The oven thermal fuse trips when the temperature in the oven gets too hot. After the thermal fuse trips, the oven won't heat. If the thermal fuse trips after the self-cleaning cycle, try resetting the fuse by turning off electricity to the oven, removing the exterior back panel, and pushing the reset button. If the fuse tripped during normal operation, replace it. If the problem persists, the electronic oven control board might require replacement. Reset the thermal fuse after replacing the control board.
Possibly a tripped thermal fuse. Should be located behind the panel in between the upper and lower ovens. Might have a red reset button on it you can push down. If it clicks and then works again, look for possible cooling fan problems.
When you say board I assume you mean the electronic clock/timer. This timer directly affects the oven operation. Even if the internal oven fuse is blown or the thermal overload is tripped the electronic timer and oven light will always work. If the oven light works and the electronic timer/clock does not I'd say that the timer/clock is faulty.
I got this problem on my GE Trivection oven after a 2 minute blackout. "Supply Open Neutral" showed up and no other buttons worked. I shut off the breaker to the oven from outside and it still didn't work. I then turned the breaker off of the other appliances in the kitchen and turned the Trivection oven breaker on first and then it worked. I don't know if it was the order or whether I just turned it off for a longer period of time, but the oven started working normal again.
Hello- First off, do not use 'self clean', or as most Techs call it: "Self- Destruct". This 'feature' cheerfully sold by the salesman destroys more oven and range components than any other failure. Now- the racks had a thin layer of grease on them when the oven tried to turn stuff inside the oven to ash. The grease is now a hard rubbery coating on the surface of the rack. To solve this problem, you must determine by observation, where the rack touches the sides of the oven. These contact areas need to be cleaned thoroughly with scotchbrite and a small portion of oven cleaner. Make sure you use gloves. Sliding rack in and out to 'mark' these small spots works pretty good. Once cleaned and wiped down, they should work fine. I recommend cleaning by removing as much 'stuff' by scraping and wiping down with moist cloth. Turn on to 450deg for 30 min. Much safer, less costly. Please acknowledge this posted solution if helpful. Have more info if needed- Thanks -Ed
This model has issues with the power input controller board, usually caused by surge following a power failure... board is $285 from GE plus $90 or so to install after paying a $100 service call. Replacment part is special ordered and generally takes a week or so.... have 2 of these ovens... ask me how I know.... LOL
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