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This is a genuine replacement part
From the Manufacturer
This is a Genuine Replacement Part ,The Model Number and Name for the Following Item: Whirlpool (WHIRA) 8304452 Fuse - Thermal.
Nana Carolina girl
Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2022
I installed it myself on my built in oven. Works as good as new now, so happy I tried before calling a repair person. Nana knocked it out of the ballpark. Next the freezer door gasket.
amazoner
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2022
Worked great. Pretty easy to install No issues on ordering or receiving. Saved me a lot of money.
DeeZell Chartier
Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2021
Worked perfectly
Batman
Reviewed in Canada on March 2, 2020
Own a Kitchenaid oven/microwave unit that after doing a self clean the oven would not heat up, thermol fuse blows and needs replacing. To test fuse disconnect the 2 wires from the fuse, doesn't matter which side is which, clamp thev2 wires together and turn oven on, if oven heats up the fuse needs replacing.Definately a two man job to remove unit from wall.Fuse replacement did the job and oven works again.
Steve
Reviewed in the United States on February 15, 2020
Worked perfectly on KitchenAid Wall oven Model #KEBS107. If your oven suddenly stops heating especially after using the "self-clean" function and everything else (like the control panel) appears OK, then this is the go-to piece to fix the problem for $50. KitchenAid/Whirlpool are known to blow these thermal fuses especially after using self-cleaner. Easy to install. May take 2 people to pull wall-oven out to get to back of it to replace or just use an adjustable table to slide it onto and do it yourself. Saved $250-$300 by doing it myself
R P K
Reviewed in Canada on August 23, 2019
Same as original. Solved the problem with my oven.
Michael J Andrew
Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2018
Our KitchenAid double oven is several years old and survived several self-clean cycles, but last month we were a victim of what we've discovered is a common problem of the thermal fuse blowing at the end of a cleaning cycle. It cost us $350 to replace the bake element a few years ago, so we were not happy to have to spend that money again to replace this part. So, after much googling my wife and I decided to go for it. We couldn't find a picture of what the back of our exact oven looked like (KEBS277), but there are several videos on you tube and elsewhere that provided some clues as to what to expect. Even removing the fan looked fairly straightforward.The most daunting part of the work is the weight of the unit. Its very heavy! Luckily we found one of our coffee tables was almost the same height as the bottom of the oven, and as I could sit on it without it collapsing I decided it would handle the oven. We covered the tabletop with a thick moving blanket, and stood the coffee table on another blanket (to allow us to move the table without scratching the wood floor). Sliding the oven out of the recess was surprisingly simple enough, and once it was out onto the table we could then turn it around 90 degrees to be able to work on the back.From here it was smooth sailing. There were two cover panels to remove, and then the lower oven thermal fuse was clearly visible. (No fan to remove after all). Replacing the fuse was trivial. The same area on the upper oven had an extra cover to remove. I didn't bother at the time, although I have purchased another fuse so when we clean the top oven at some point in the future we'll have the part. The oven has been working fine now for a couple of weeks, and we're happy to have saved the call-out fee and all the hassle.
chenger
Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2017
Exact replacement for the OEM fuse in a Kitchenaid wall oven but at a better price than elsewhere. Still, I think these things are vastly overpriced for what they are. And apparently due to a poor design, the oven tends to blow the fuse when run thru a cleaning cycle. That makes for a very expensive cleaning. My question: why can't the manufacturer use a circuit breaker which can be reset instead of the fuse which has to be replaced?
Masterchef
Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2016
Yeah! IT fit my wall oven and solved the problem.
Eric
Reviewed in the United States on October 1, 2016
Amazing how this little fuse shuts down the oven. This was for a Kitchenmaid Double Oven KEBS208SSS00. Every thing, other than heating seemed to work on the oven. The touch panel, convention fan and checked the heating element and everything seem to be in working condition. Install was easy. Some sheetmetal to remove but no big deal. Hardest part was getting the oven out as it weighs a ton. May be not a ton. Make sure you put in the full model number for the part search. I only put in the kebs208 part and a different fuse came up. I took the oven out, opened it and that part was no way to be found? Amazon same day shipping saves the day!Updated: 1/12/17Well, i fixed the symptom but not cause. I hear many people that had this issue after the self cleaning cycle and since it uses higher temperatures than normal use, it over heats and the fuse blows. This is a "Thermal" fuse and not electrical. My issue, happen to be a blower or fan that stopped working. Hide sight 20/20. I noticed when on, the lower vent, there was significantly more air flow from the vents than from the top. Needless to say, without the blower going, the upper oven went out again after one use as it was not able to dump the heat from the within the enclosure. If the fuse keeps blowing, shine a flashlight in to the vent slot and see whether the fan is moving when oven on. As you all know, taking the oven out to get to the fuse is no fun.
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