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Originally Posted by: kayakcrzy  Unfortunantly, the sears site is down right now, but on the back of the oven, you would have to pull the oven from the wall, and then take the upper back panel off there will be a round part, they call it a thermostat. It is round, and has 2 wires coming to it. Now, before you do all this kill the power to the oven. Ok, now, once you locate that part. Pull the two wires off of it, and put the 2 terminal ends of the wires together, and put some tape around the terminals so they do not hit metal. So what we are doing here is jumping it out. Once that is done, turn the power on, and see if it works. If it does, DO NOT RUN it with the thermostat jumped out. This is for checking purposes only. Actually, if you have an ohm meter, once you located the part with the power off, you can pull the 2 wires off, and ohm it out. If it gets a reading it is good, If not replace it. If the oven went out, after you put it in a clean cycle, you would need to replace the oven sensor too. Because the oven got to hot, and blew the thermostat. Tom ApplianceEducator.com Kayakcrzy, Unfortunately, One of us in incorrect. That model number comes up as a Fridgidaire built Free Standing Electric Range, in the Sears site. Also in the site, According to the wiring diagram and schematic, there is no Thermal fuse in the circuit for the oven. Good Luck, :) :) :)
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