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AaronGo  
#1 Posted : Monday, October 15, 2012 5:28:19 PM(UTC)
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AaronGo

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Joined: 10/15/2012(UTC)
Posts: 2

I have a Kitchen Aid side-by-side refrigerator with an 8-cube ice maker. The fridge model # is KSRG25FTS01. Icicles started forming underneath the ice maker a few weeks ago, so I took a hair dryer and thawed out the ice that had formed underneath the ice mold. Once I had all the ice thawed, I noticed that some of the coating (some teflon coating I assume?) on the right-side mold was starting to peel off. That coincides with ice cubes not completely coming out of the right side of the mold unit. Many times I would raise the plastic door and would see an ice cube stuck on the right side of the unit.

Here is my theory...the teflon coating peeling off is causing the ice cube to get partially stuck in that individual mold, which is causing water to overflow onto the area underneath the mold. This ice slowly builds up and begins overflowing to the area beneath the ice maker, leading to the icicles.

If I am right, then I have two options. Replace the mold unit with a new one (Whirlpool W10190929 Mold-Ice - AppliancePartsPros.com) or replace the entire ice maker unit. That is $40 vs $120.

Any other ideas about why the icicles are forming? The ice maker makes ice great now that I thawed the unit out, but I can see little icicles forming again. Those will slowly become bigger. Plus I can feel ice underneath the mold area from overflowing water, which I doubt is supposed to be there. It wasn't making icicles up until ~4 weeks ago and was working perfectly. Thanks in advance!
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Gene  
#2 Posted : Tuesday, October 16, 2012 7:20:27 PM(UTC)
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Gene

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Hi Aaron,

Yes, you are absolutely right with your diagnosis. Let's look into the repair options.

#1. If you will decide to fix the old ice maker then besides the mold you, very likely, would have to replace the thermostat also. In order to provide proper temperature connection between the thermostat and the mold you have to have the alumilastic cement. The total for these 3 items is $91.10. Keep in mind that the rate of successful ice makers repair is relatively low and nobody can guaranty that any other ice maker part will brake soon.

#2. Replacing the whole ice maker will cost you $31.52 more but such repair is much more reliable, very simple and you will have one year warranty on the whole ice maker.

- The mold Part number: W10190929
Part number: W10190929



- The thermostat Part number: 627985
Part number: 627985



- The alumilastic cement Part number: 4317852
Part number: 4317852



- The complete ice maker Part number: 2198597
Part number: 2198597

Gene.
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