Myron T Springtown , TX September 14, 2018 Appliance: General Electric General Electric JBP23DR4BB Oven temperature was not properly controlled The two thermometers we placed in the oven revealed what we expected; the temperature was not what it was set on the control panel. And it wasn't consistently high or low. We almost purchased a new oven, but tried looking online for replacement parts. New control boards were available on a popular auction site. The prices were reasonable. I continued looking and found the AppliancePartsPro site. There I found a lower price and informative videos. I ordered an oven control board and a new temperature sensor. They arrived quickly. Following the guidance provided in the video, the control board and sensor were quickly replaced. The oven works properly now. The cost was a small fraction of the price of a new stove. Read More... 6 People found this story helpful Do-It-Yourself Rating: Repair Time Estimate: 15-30 minutes Tools: Nut Drivers
Jason D Seattle , WA December 03, 2016 Oven control board fried I used the videos I found online how to identify the model of the control board, and searched online for it. Application Pars Pro was a great help in this. The model of my board wasn't listed anywhere but their database helped me cross link it with other compatible models. First I tried off the oven's breaker, and unplugged it. To replace the board I unscrewed the back middle shield plate of the oven then I could remove the top sheild and expose the old board. I then unscrewed the board leaving the wires attached. Putting the new board in place and screwing it in. Next I moved each wire one by one from the old board to the new one. When finished I verified each connection and put the shield plates back on. When turning oven back on I noticed the range on light never turned on. Figuring it was a connection issues. I shut everything back off and investigated. It turned out when I swapped the board I mistakenly unplugged one of the leads going to that led.plugging it back in fixed the problem. Read More... Do-It-Yourself Rating: Repair Time Estimate: Less than 15 minutes Tools: Screwdrivers