I'm going to fix a very old oven on Monday
Not sure of the age but must be 40 years old! They don't make 'em like that now!
I visited recently to assess a fault with this great old cooker where the lower of the two ovens was coming on despite being switched off.
It's a lovely old oven and parts are obsolete, but I really wanted to get it back into operation for the customer.
I identified a fault with the lower oven switch/thermostat which has failed internally causing the switch to energise the lower oven even though it is not actually switched on.
Being so old, I wasn't expecting to be able to source an original part. I made some enquiries but to no avail.
This is therefore going to require a bit of rewiring using a modern selector switch and thermostat.
On Monday, I'm going to attempt to replace the existing switch using a selection of switches in the hope that at least one of them will be of the correct shaft length to protrude correctly through to the selector knob at the front. So long as it physically fits, it will be a simple matter of tracing which wires go to which elements and wiring accordingly.
It's jobs like this that stretch my engineering skills to achieve a result rather than simply swapping a like-for-like part over.




