3beltwesty
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2010
- Messages
- 1,057
Any experts know the GE part number for the 120 volt outlets
I am looking for the right/corner 120 volt socket; the one NOT marked timed.
The only Stove I have and use daily looks very similar to your "new" stove. But the unit here is a late 1971 Hotpoint RHV886 Electronic oven range. The lower oven on mine was when it worked both a 945 Mhz Microwave and a Regular self cleaning oven too. The patent plate input here is 18.1 Kw. It is a very heavy SOB.
The RHV886 here has three push buttons below the two 120 volt plugs.
Left is a range fan High/Low Off
Middle is light on and off
Right is upper oven light on and off
The RHV886 has no meat thermomoter; but has a roto grill Rotisserie Skewer in the upper oven; that is controlled by the top left oven knob.
The lower oven's door has no window; there is a round cooking microwave shelf that rotates.
The lower panel below the lower oven door is on the RHV886 full of the microwave tube and its power supply; at least 50 Lbs of stuff.
Random comments:
The fuse that is for the front 120 volt sockets is hidden in the back left burner area.
The unit here is heavy as heck, we actually have a steel sheet on each side on the floor to allow the unit pull out easier.
The relay for the lower oven is in the back and lower. Before installing your stove in a hole; make sure your lower oven works! Pulling the oven out to replace this relay here is not fun at all.
The front right bigger burner here is a Supermatic/temperature controlled burner with sensor. Ours has died or gotten flakey about 3 or 4 times since 1971. Parts houses price the sensor if they have one at many hundreds of dollars. The parts were 30 bucks in the 1970's.
Unit here draws gobs of power if maxed out with all on or maybe self cleaning. Patent plate 18.1 KW marked 115/230 to 120/240 volts. The amps thus at 235 volts would be 18100/235= 77 amps. That is the reason we got a 200 amp service back in 1971; the new range for the new house! Ours listed for 1125 and we dickered and outs cost about 900 ish.e
With our unit; we have a 4x10" metal vent that goes through the attic and vents to the roof. The oven draws both from the very top louver and lower vents above the burners. These of course are removeable and cleanable; I clean them with Dawn hand dish soap; which cuts grease real well.
The surface units are rated at both 236 and 250 volts in the specs as follows:
8" unit 2405 watts and 2700 watts
6" unit 1425 watts and 1600 watts
I am looking for the right/corner 120 volt socket; the one NOT marked timed.
The only Stove I have and use daily looks very similar to your "new" stove. But the unit here is a late 1971 Hotpoint RHV886 Electronic oven range. The lower oven on mine was when it worked both a 945 Mhz Microwave and a Regular self cleaning oven too. The patent plate input here is 18.1 Kw. It is a very heavy SOB.
The RHV886 here has three push buttons below the two 120 volt plugs.
Left is a range fan High/Low Off
Middle is light on and off
Right is upper oven light on and off
The RHV886 has no meat thermomoter; but has a roto grill Rotisserie Skewer in the upper oven; that is controlled by the top left oven knob.
The lower oven's door has no window; there is a round cooking microwave shelf that rotates.
The lower panel below the lower oven door is on the RHV886 full of the microwave tube and its power supply; at least 50 Lbs of stuff.
Random comments:
The fuse that is for the front 120 volt sockets is hidden in the back left burner area.
The unit here is heavy as heck, we actually have a steel sheet on each side on the floor to allow the unit pull out easier.
The relay for the lower oven is in the back and lower. Before installing your stove in a hole; make sure your lower oven works! Pulling the oven out to replace this relay here is not fun at all.
The front right bigger burner here is a Supermatic/temperature controlled burner with sensor. Ours has died or gotten flakey about 3 or 4 times since 1971. Parts houses price the sensor if they have one at many hundreds of dollars. The parts were 30 bucks in the 1970's.
Unit here draws gobs of power if maxed out with all on or maybe self cleaning. Patent plate 18.1 KW marked 115/230 to 120/240 volts. The amps thus at 235 volts would be 18100/235= 77 amps. That is the reason we got a 200 amp service back in 1971; the new range for the new house! Ours listed for 1125 and we dickered and outs cost about 900 ish.e
With our unit; we have a 4x10" metal vent that goes through the attic and vents to the roof. The oven draws both from the very top louver and lower vents above the burners. These of course are removeable and cleanable; I clean them with Dawn hand dish soap; which cuts grease real well.
The surface units are rated at both 236 and 250 volts in the specs as follows:
8" unit 2405 watts and 2700 watts
6" unit 1425 watts and 1600 watts