Appliance Medic Service GE Range in Montvale, NJ so if you need to arrange a time for your appliance inspection and repair, please give us a call at 201 589 2399 and Appliance Medic will be there to serve you with professionalism, honesty. Providing high quality service for over 20 years, Appliance Medic has answered the calls of citizens from Montvale, NJ Bergen county striving to make sure their daily activities are not interrupted by a broken appliance. Montvale is a borough in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the borough’s population was 7,844, reflecting an increase of 810 from the 7,034 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn increased by 88 from the 6,946 counted in the 1990 Census. Montvale was incorporated as a borough on August 31, 1894, from portions of Orvil Township and Washington Township. The borough was formed during the “Boroughitis” phenomenon then sweeping through Bergen County, in which 26 boroughs were formed in the county in 1894 alone. On February 15, 1896, Montvale acquired part of Orvil Township. In 1906, Montvale added further land from Orvil and Washington townships, and in 1912, Montvale added territory from Upper Saddle River. On May 20, 1959, portions of Montvale were passed to River Vale, and on December 9 and 14, 1965, territories were exchanged between Montvale and Upper Saddle River. When you call Appliances Medic in Montvale ,NJ, you can be confident that the GE Range repair technician who services your Product is highly trained and experienced.
Having your range, break down on you before an important dinner can really put a crimp in your day. That’s why Appliance Medic have learned to call GE Range first when they need maintenance or repair for their kitchen appliances.
Appliance Medic has been repairing range tops, slide-in ranges, ever since it opened back in 1999. Our range of services makes us leading company when it comes to repairing cook tops in homes and businesses.
We’re authorized to repair GE brand ranges. More importantly, our customers know they can count on honest, friendly, and reliable service whenever they need it. This has been the hallmark of our repair service since day one, and it’s something we and our customers never take for granted.
Unlike a gas range, an electric range will never leak fuel or create carbon monoxide from burning fuel. Instead, an electric range uses an electrical supply, your home current, 220 volts, and converts it to heat. The greater the electrical flow generated the more heat that results. Turning the knobs controlling your burners or oven works similar to a light dimmer switch, increasing or decreasing the flow of electrical current and thus the temperature of the element. Here is some Problems of GE Ranges:
- Unit not broiling or baking in GE Ranges?
- GE Ranges not keeping the temperature
- Low flame in GE Range?
- Broken thermostat in GE Range?
- GE Ranges malfunctioning selector switch problem?
- Defective gas safety valve in GE Ranges?
- GE Ranges igniter making a clicking sound
- Ignitor glows but not ignition to the unit in GE Ranges?
- GE Ranges stuck on self cleaning mode?
- GE range is discoloring on top?
- Door not opening after cycle is completed in GE Ranges?
The oldest electric GE ranges use a conventional coil heating element, known as a “resistive coil.” This is nothing more than an electrical wire encased in an insulating sheath. This sheath is the reason you cannot electrocute yourself by touching the burner or the pan on top of it. You know this one by the appearance flat black coils over rounded burner drip bowls that catch your drips and spills.
Moving to the electric ranges typically feature two heating elements one for baking, one for broiling. Both are controlled with an oven selector switch as well as a temperature control. A thermostat monitors and regulates Ranges temperatures, opening the circuit to break the flow of heat (electricity) and closing it when the temperature drops by more than 20 degrees. This thermostat is directly behind the oven temperature-setting knob with a thin copper tube that runs to the oven for temperature sensing.