This was not my first rodeo have repaired our appliances and those of our daughters for years, have ordered parts from this site several times. We had a cold spell in Texas, as you may have heard. We weathered it okay but left the dishwasher closed on one of the colder nights, woke up to water on the floor in the kitchen. Turned off the supply line, shut off the dishwasher power, bailed out the bottom, and mopped up. Had a fair idea of what the cause was, checked a few websites, watched some repair videos, including the ones on this site. I'm a belt and suspenders type, so I got both the float assembly and inlet water valve assembly. As is generally true of all appliances, there are several variants of this model dishwasher, so videos can't show all the ins-and-outs for each specific model. Had a little trouble deciding which inlet valve assembly to get, as equivalent/upgrade parts were not indicated, but went with the assembly that looked the most like the one in the machine. As in the past, got them in short order, even with the bad weather and ensuing mess. The videos showed the replacement of the float and valve separately, but the dishwasher must be pulled out to do the float, so decided to do them together. That turned out to be a good idea because even with door disassembly, assessing the valve was difficult, particularly the waterline, which was difficult to reach and hold from the front. Removed the old float assembly, took the valve out through the side to replace it, then installed the new float assembly. The line was clamped to the valve with one of those coiled spring gizmos that are difficult to work with, pulled it off, and replaced it with a 7/16 screwed band clamp. Some expletives were deleted during the process, but it all went together fine, at least until the final stages of re-assembly. The curved splash-guard that goes under the door is held by two long pointed screws that go through deeply-recessed tubes and mate with openings in the base. Probably easy to do with the machine on its back, but I had to do it from the front while lying on the floor. I'm a former electronics tech and have devices for holding and inserting screws, but it required several tries with steady hands for each screw. More expletives were deleted. A tubular driver that firmly held the screws would have been ideal. Didn't have one, but finally got it done. Put the dishwasher in the cabinet, re-connected the water and electric lines, and it's all good. After thinking about it, believe some tightly-fitting thin fiber washers or just some thin pieces of plastic with punched hols pushed on neat the points after the screws are insereted through the tubes would work and conserve expletives.