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Parts for Frigidaire CPEB30S9FC1 Wall Oven - AppliancePartsPros.comHere is your wiring diagram
http://manuals.frigidaire.com/p...assomption/318046235.pdf[COLOR="Blue"]1) No F10/Runaway Temperature.[/COLOR]
Not sure why you no longer get an F10. Could be another part of the circuit has blown out.
[COLOR="Blue"]2) Broil works and the broil element works 100% with proper temperature.[/COLOR]
This indicates that the temperature sensor and the safety thermostat are OK
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3) I checked the OHMS on temperature sensor and it comes back back normal at approximately 1K (per company spec).[/COLOR]
This looks OK.
4) I verified the bake element and it works 100%. No issues.
[COLOR="Blue"]5) I checked electrical power on the bake element terminals with the oven running and set at 350, and there is LOW power...[/COLOR]
Not sure what you mean by low power or how you measured it.
Here is where things get complicated.
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1) Although I have the electrical schematic of the oven, It's not easy for me to trace the wires coming to the front of the oven on the controller board to see if the thermostat has continuity. I know the thermostat is in the back off the oven [/COLOR]
I doubt it is the safety thermostat as it kills power to all the elements.
FYI: L2 voltage goes thru the Safety Thermostat, then thru the DLB relay (double line brake) K4 on the board to the right hand side of all the elements.
The element control relays K5, K6 and K14 then control the L1 voltage to the left hand side of the elements.
[COLOR="Blue"]2) I don't see any electrical issue with the controller board (cold solder, burned relay) and the board works properly in terms of the time, buttons, etc but don't know of a way to properly know if the electronic temperature controller works or not.[/COLOR]
Electronic parts can blow without any physical indication that they are blown.
[COLOR="Blue"]If the issue was the thermostat why would the broil element work 100% and not the bake element?[/COLOR]
It should not if the wiring diagram is correct.
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Is the thermostat also connected to the broil or does it work separately for some reason?[/COLOR]
Looks like it is connected to all elements.
If the issue is the controller board why would it work for broil and not bake? Wouldn't it simply not work for either and also have issues with keeping time, buttons not working, etc?
No. The control relays have their own control circuitry.
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I'm trying to minimize my cost and time in repairing the oven. The controller is real easy to replace but if I buy a new controller and its not the issue I'm out $300.[/COLOR]
If you order the board from AppliancePartsPros you can return it if it does not solve your problem. Please see their return policy.
[COLOR="Blue"]If I assume it's the thermostat[/COLOR]
I doubt it is the thermostat. I am assuming that by thermostat you mean the oven sensor. The unit knew it had an over temperature condition and it is the oven sensor that detects the temperature.
[COLOR="Blue"]If anyone has any idea about better diagnosing the controller I would greatly appreciate it...[/COLOR]
The usual way is to check everything else. If that is OK then all that is left is the control board.
One thing I would check is how the bake element looks when it does run.
Does the entire element get red or does just part of it get red. Sometimes an element can short out where the metal feet that hold it up are attached. This then shorts to the frame and you have 120 volts across that part of the element and the control board cannot control the temperature.
If it looks OK then I would replace the control board.