I ordered 2 bake elements and bulbs and was able to easily fix 1 of the ovens. The serviceman who repaired the left oven did not repair it correctly so, one of the wires was not accessible so, I could only fix one oven.
After shutting off the power, I EASILY fixed the right oven - with a LOT of care and a little elbow grease - in disconnecting the broken element, by doing exactly as it said to in the video, making certain not to allow the wires to slip back into the hole that it was pulled from. Since the power was off, I took a fork and slid the wire and it's little connector between the tines of the fork to prevent them from sliding back into the hole, until I could reconnect it to the new bake element. EASY-PEASY. The hardest part was making sure I did not break the fragile connectors, because one of them bent when I was disconnecting and reconnecting them - they were very tight.
JUST as the DYI users said - it took about 15 minutes - maybe an extra minute or two because the connectors were hard to get off and back on and I didn't want to break them.
To think I was going to pay an appliance repair company $80 just for a service call to assess the problem ($80 would be put toward cost of entire job if I hired them), as well as the cost of the part - which I know would be inflated - as well as the labor, which reviewers said was too costly or "pricey" for the labor involved. I would have paid HUNDREDS of dollars, instead of less than $100, which is what I paid for the parts. I was very afraid of doing this so, had my husband (he's not handy) stand-by and hold the flashlight. :) I said a prayer before, during, and after the repair because I was very nervous, and then GRATEFUL, that I was able to fix the oven myself, without damaging anything. I was SO HAPPY when the element turned red and the oven started to heat! I am a 57 year-old woman who makes most of our home repairs. My husband asked apprehensively, "Are you sure you can do this? How do you know how to do this?" I said, because I learned how to do it on the ApplianceParts website - I watched their video several times.
This site is by far one of the best DYI sites, especially considering that you really can do the repair yourself - you just have to be confident and you can't be afraid to try. I told my family and friends all about my repair and this website! Thanks so very much!!