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Niel 23-11-2004 12:27 AM

Electric Stove Not Hot Enough
 
New house (to us) with 18-year-old Jenn-Air coil surface elements that
just don't get hot enough. Contacts seem good. Could it just need
new coil surface elements or sockets or both? I'd rather not buy a
whole new stove.
Also, 18-year-old GE oven doesn't seem to heat up to the set
temperature. Could it just need new heating elements or sockets or
both, too?

John R Weiss 23-11-2004 12:44 AM

"Niel" > wrote...
> New house (to us) with 18-year-old Jenn-Air coil surface elements that
> just don't get hot enough. Contacts seem good. Could it just need
> new coil surface elements or sockets or both? I'd rather not buy a
> whole new stove.
> Also, 18-year-old GE oven doesn't seem to heat up to the set
> temperature. Could it just need new heating elements or sockets or
> both, too?


Check the electric supply. Is the voltage at the stove correct? if not, you
may need to check into the house wiring.

Check the sockets. Is there any dirt, grease, or corrosion built up? Remove
each element and check.

Check the oven temp. Get an oven thermometer and check the accuracy of the
thermostat.



John R Weiss 23-11-2004 12:44 AM

"Niel" > wrote...
> New house (to us) with 18-year-old Jenn-Air coil surface elements that
> just don't get hot enough. Contacts seem good. Could it just need
> new coil surface elements or sockets or both? I'd rather not buy a
> whole new stove.
> Also, 18-year-old GE oven doesn't seem to heat up to the set
> temperature. Could it just need new heating elements or sockets or
> both, too?


Check the electric supply. Is the voltage at the stove correct? if not, you
may need to check into the house wiring.

Check the sockets. Is there any dirt, grease, or corrosion built up? Remove
each element and check.

Check the oven temp. Get an oven thermometer and check the accuracy of the
thermostat.



Ida Slapter 23-11-2004 01:49 AM

On 22 Nov 2004 15:27:00 -0800, (Niel) wrote:

>New house (to us) with 18-year-old Jenn-Air coil surface elements that
>just don't get hot enough. Contacts seem good. Could it just need
>new coil surface elements or sockets or both? I'd rather not buy a
>whole new stove.


Face the facts....you have an 18 year old stove. Would you expect
a 1986 Ford F-150 to preform as YOU demand?





Donald Tsang 23-11-2004 01:50 AM

In article >,
Niel > wrote:
>New house (to us) with 18-year-old Jenn-Air coil surface elements that
>just don't get hot enough. Contacts seem good. Could it just need
>new coil surface elements or sockets or both? I'd rather not buy a
>whole new stove.


Is it possible that you have a 220v stove being powered by a 110v line?

(on a more serious note, are you used to cooking on electric? Electric
stoves certainly doesn't get as hot as gas stoves...)

Donald

John R Weiss 23-11-2004 02:27 AM

"Donald Tsang" > wrote...
>
> (on a more serious note, are you used to cooking on electric? Electric
> stoves certainly doesn't get as hot as gas stoves...)


I think you'll find that among regular-grade (not "commercial") stoves, electric
stoves are rated at a higher BTU output than gas stoves on the burners. They
take longer to heat up, but put out more heat once they get there.

Some of the newer glass-top and "InfraRed" electric burners may be lower, and
there may be a few "high-output" gas burners, but on average the electric stove
will boil a pot of water faster.




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