Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Digest for misc.consumers.frugal-living@googlegroups.com - 4 updates in 1 topic

The Real Bev <bashley101@gmail.com>: Aug 25 10:09AM -0700

On 08/24/2021 08:48 AM, root wrote:
> I bought a battery operated hand sparking unit
> to replace matches in case another sparking
> unit fails after this December.
 
The oven is completely controlled by a touch-panel. If that fails there
doesn't seem to be a workaround :-(
 
--
Cheers, Bev
When cryptography is outlawed, only outlaws will
qwertzuio asdfghjk pyxcvbnml -- M. O'Dorney
Dennis <dgw80@hotmail.com>: Aug 25 11:15AM -0700

On Wed, 25 Aug 2021 10:09:02 -0700, The Real Bev
>> unit fails after this December.
 
>The oven is completely controlled by a touch-panel. If that fails there
>doesn't seem to be a workaround :-(
 
We have a Jenn-air electric double wall oven. It is odd, in that the
top oven has touch controls and a digital display, but the bottom oven
has mechanical dial-type controls. Guess which one failed? And I can't
even get replacement parts for the digital controls from the
manufacturer. The top oven still turns on and can be set for 350F or
lower, but no higher temperature (the default temp is 350F, the
up-temp button failed but the down-temp button still kind-of works).
Still, I guess after over 20 years, something was due to break.
 
I replaced the spark module on our Jenn-air gas cooktop myself a few
years ago. Part was $27 from repairclinic.com.
 
Dennis (evil)
--
My output is down, my income is up, I take a short position on the long bond and
my revenue stream has its own cash flow. -George Carlin
Bob F <bobnospam@gmail.com>: Aug 25 02:41PM -0700

On 8/25/2021 11:15 AM, Dennis wrote:
 
> I replaced the spark module on our Jenn-air gas cooktop myself a few
> years ago. Part was $27 from repairclinic.com.
 
> Dennis (evil)
 
I have in the past repaired stove problems related to the "touch" panel,
related to broken plastic parts under the plastic control panel that
breaks, so that presses no longer apply pressure to the switch that the
plastic part is supposed to push. A little flexible could work to
re-attach the plastic pusher part to its frame to hold it in place with
enough flexibility to work properly.
 
This usually seemed to be related to the flat plastic panel that has the
temp up function being used so much that it cracks, allowing too much
motion to be applied to the flexible plastic part underneath, that then
breaks.
Bob F <bobnospam@gmail.com>: Aug 25 02:44PM -0700

On 8/25/2021 2:41 PM, Bob F wrote:
> temp up function being used so much that it cracks, allowing too much
> motion to be applied to the flexible plastic part underneath, that then
> breaks.
 
Oops. Forgot to mention that I used a piece of aluminum duct tape on the
back of the flat panel to reinforce the cracked plastic panel.
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