The stove was rocking a bit so I slid the bottom draw out to gain
access. I adjusted the foot then noticed the power cord was pinched
(slightly) behind the side of the stove. I reached over to the cord to
pull it back into the space where the draw goes. As I moved the cord
there was a spark and the breaker tripped for the stove. My luck holds
out as I was not touching anything.
My first guess was the power cable was cut but I checked it carefully
and it looks ok. I dont see a burn mark anywhere to tell where the
spark came from.
I pulled the stove out, plugged it in and reset the breaker. Stove
still works but I concerned to use it until I know what went wrong.
I can replace the power cord but how can I be sure that was it? Is the
stove safe to use? I will call GE in the morning.
I cheched where the power cord is connected and everything seems
solid.
Any Suggestions appreciated.
Steve
220v ranges usually use a 4 plug recepical... red, black, white, ground
On Sun, 13 Mar 2005 16:18:26 -0800, steve <junk...@therivets.net>
wrote:
I will inspect the power cord more closely for a cut tonight.
If I find a cut at least I will know what happened.
My concern is its a short in the stove and is dangerous??
Am I correct that an existing stove can still run a 3 wire outlet?
That is what they sold me at the store when I bought the range.
Steve
Not having a new strain relief connector for the cord I used the old
one from the original range. When I installed it I was not happy with
it. If I had left it the way it was, if I were to move the range in
any way the cord would cut into the range. So I had an electrian come
over and replace the strain relief connector while I had him move and
add some extra outlets in a bedroom.