I have a relatively new Kenmore stove from Sears. I bought it about 2 years ago.
I was in the kitchen last week when I took a day off work, the house was nice and quiet, and all the sudden poof the oven comes on!
I stood there for a minute going “hey… wait a minute, I didn’t just turn that on, did I?..” then after about 1-2 minutes it went back out.
Since then, I’ve noticed that it does this periodically. It just comes on for a minute or two, then shuts itself back off. It’s not a self cleaning oven or anything (I don’t know if that would make a difference). Any ideas whats going on?
Still have the owner’s manual? Good place to start. Otherwise call the mfg. and ask for guidance. You should have the model number ready when you call, you also might want to see if you have any record of when it was purchased, CC transaction on your old bills, cancelled check?
I’m assuming from your description that this is a gas oven. I think the first thing you should do is have a qualified service person check for gas leaks in your fittings. You may be sitting on a time bomb.
Were you near it shortly before it turned itself on? Possibly you managed to activate the Sabbath mode? (turns on after a random delay)
Otherwise, it sounds like your range is the opposite of mine. It would randomly turn the oven off while baking. Solution was to have the main control board replaced. If you’re out of warranty, it’s nearly as expensive as buying a new range.
Our old oven used to do that.
We then noticed that the oven clock, which had never worked before, was working.
And the oven timer started working too. :eek:
Oh, I’ve read an entire article about the sabbath mode on appliances. There’s dispute among orthodox jews apparently as to how much “work” you can do on the sabbath. Some are fine with setting their ovens to come on at some random time in the future and cook so hot for so long, or whatever. Personally, it really seems hair-splitting to me…
If you’d like to fix it yourself, go to www.repairclinic.com They have a huge database. You look up your brand and model, and a series of troubleshooting questions will help you figure out what’s broken. Then, of course, they’ll sell you the part and tell you how to do it.