Purchased the two fuses from Appliance Parts Pros. I have done this once before so I had built a pedestal to slide the oven out of the cabinet onto the pedestal. This makes a one person job out of the repair. I first killed the power, then unlocked the door with a wire coat hangar (built a short L on the end and slid it over the lock). I removed the doors, removed the screws holding the oven in in the cabinet and slid it out onto the pedestal. I removed the top cover and the back cover from the back side of the oven, replaced the fuses, replaced all of the parts and slid it back into the cabinet. Turned the power back on, monitored the warm up and it all worked fine. Almost an impossible job without building a pedestal to slide the oven in and out of the cavity. With a pedestal built, an easy repair.