Originally Posted by: rlcjmrdr 
just installed a new control board and its not working. before i took out the old board the clock worked. the lights for[ oven on] preheat] clean] all worked. stove top worked.with new board clock and lights not working. stove top still works.oven and broiler were not working before new board and still don;t work. did i get a bad board or maybe the wrong one.boards look differnt plugs for bake, broil, neu,L1 are in different places 5 prong plug is in same place.I can see burn marks on old board .orignal part#WB11K10013 replacement part wb27k10143.no sign of life on new board.I do have a meter but don;t know where to touch contact points to control board to check for power.thanks
First things first....did you take pictures of old dead board while connected so you would know where to put connectors on new board ?
If clock touchpad are not working, did you reconnect the ribbon cable from clock / pad to the board correctly ? It is possible you crossed them.
You also might have connected power supply to board incorrectly...put it back on wrong pins ?
Have you set boards side by side and looked carefully at each connector you will utilize to make sure pin counts match ? Most moly connectors have a key pin of some kind to make sure you only plug the proper moly connector onto the proper pin riser on the board. You can't really hurt stuff on the output side..if you connect a bake element to a broil output for example. My wiring harness had color coded modules to match the color listed on the board for the output harnesses.
You can fry a board in a hurry if inputs are connected incorrectly or you connect an input (thermostat, sensor, power feed) to an output by mistake.
It is NOT unusual for boards to have open connectors pins/risers, boards are used across mutliple models and different models have different features and different connectors.
You should be able to look up the new part # and cross reference against your model range. It is possible the wrong board was picked/shipped for your order. It happens.
Odds of board being DOA are slim. It is possible other stuff baked when oven failed previously. Oddly, the wrong board could partially work unless it is wrong brand....boards are like PC motherboards, they all have the same functionality, only differences are wire harness connector piin outs and clock/touch pad connectors.
You only have a couple choices in the long run....
check connectors and reconnect.
order new board, if it works, then old board was in fact bad. You might be able to get vendor to take first board back if you tell them ahead of time what you are trying to do.
send your OLD original failed board to a board rebuild facilty and let them bench test and repair. They will tell you if it is repairable or not. I used CoreCentricSolutions to refurb my double oven board.