Ordered the part and replaced it. For the third time since we acquired the range. This is a design flaw. At least this time the part came in one piece! The last time I had to do this, it took four tries to deliver a part that wasn't broken. The work to replace this is not difficult - you pull out your range, unplug it, and remove just four 1/4-in hex screws to get the small rear panel off, exposing the connector. Disconnect it and straighten the wire so it can be pulled through the interior of the oven. If you want, clip off the plastic snap connector - this will make it easier to pull it through the hole. Then from inside the oven, you remove the shelves and the oven floor (just a couple of screws), exposing the broken glowbar. (This is somewhat awkward because of the position you are in bent down and on your knees. If your oven is a convection model, it is a little more difficult because the convection fan projects into the oven cavity, making a tight fit when you remove and later replace the oven floor. The floor will scrape against the back as you remove it and again when you put it back in place. Two more 1/4 hex screws are all that hold the glowbar in place. Pull out the old one and then feed the new wire and connector through the holes and screw down the new glowbar BEING VERY CAREFUL not to to break or damage this strange, brittle and delicate device. Connect the wire, close the panel, put everything back as you found it and you're done.