Home > Boston Oven Repair
We have experience working on all models and brands of ovens in
Boston. If your oven smells like gas, doesn't heat efficiently or
you have any other problematic issues with it, call our toll free
number and let us deal with it in order to bring your oven to normal
working condition. You can reach us 24/7 at our toll free number
in Boston:
800-520-8445
We repair all oven brands such as:
Magic Chef ovens
Maytag ovens
GE ovens
Dacor ovens |
Jenn Air ovens
Sunray ovens
Kenmore ovens
Kitchen Aid ovens
|
Whirlpool ovens
Tappan ovens
Frigidaire ovens
and more view all brands |
Our oven Service area includes all of Boston and the surrounding
cities that are listed below:
Boston MA 02210
Waltham, MA 02452
Lowell, MA 01850
Milton, MA 02186
Framingham, MA 01701
Andover, MA 01810
Lawrence, MA 01840
Brookline, MA 02445
|
Newton, MA 02458
Woburn, MA 01807
Cambridge, MA 02139
Lynn, MA 01902
Needham, MA 02492
Quincy, MA 02169
Lexington, MA 02420
Brockton, MA 02301 |
Framingham, MA
01701
Gloucester, MA 01930
Melrose MA 02176
Norwood, MA 02062
Waltham, MA 02453
Winthrop, MA 02152
Weston, MA 02493
view the rest service areas |
One word of caution: Most of the time when an
untrained person gets involved in oven repairs he has a great chance
of creating a "basket of disassembled parts" -- where
your oven is a mess of parts that the oven repair technician must
then reassemble before he can even check what the trouble is. Only
once he has put the oven back together can he repair the original
problem. This, of course, ends up costing you more for the same
repair. In addition, if you get involved in oven repairs which you
are not familiar and experienced with, it can be dangerous. This
is because you deal with electricity and mechanical systems, so
you can easily injure yourself. The information bellow is only for
educational purpose and we don’t advise anyone to do your
own oven repair. For professional help call us to schedule your
repair appointment at our toll free number:
800-520-8445
Repairing Self-Cleaning Ovens
Self-cleaning ovens are of two types catalytic and pyrolytic. Catalytic
ovens clean continuously while being used. An especially finished
liner, rough in texture and dark in color, allows many food soils
to decompose at normal cooking temperatures. Pyrolytic self-cleaners
use intense heat to burn away the hardened grease spills and spatters,
and the housewife decides when the cleaning job is necessary. Temperatures
around 825 to 900 degrees and a controlled amount of air slowly
burn away food soils. Smoke and odors arc ventilated through a platinum-palladium
screen that serves as a catalytic "afterburner." Both
catalytic and pyrolytic ovens are made in your choice of gas or
electric models.
Do they really work? Very well indeed provided you don't expect
them to do more than they were designed to do. In the catalytic
system, the coating is fragile and must be handled with care scratching
reduces the catalyst's effectiveness. Major spills must be wiped
away as they occur, or the catalytic coating might become smothered
and ineffective. Surfaces that aren't treated racks, windows, and
often door liners must be cleaned as usual. Since there's little
to go wrong with catalytic cleaning systems, and their basic construction
is the same as for other ranges, we won't treat them further.
Pyrolytic ovens have advantages over the catalytic. Their intense
heat reaches all surfaces exposed to cooking spatters and greases
including racks and door glass. No supplementary cleaning should
be required.
On the other hand, pyrolytic ovens require a complex control system
and electrical circuitry to carry out their cleaning function. A
locking mechanism is necessary to make cleaning a "no go"
proposition if the door isn't securely latched and it's impossible
to unlock it until dishwasher reach its normal level after cleaning.
But before we consider impossible problems, let's review the process
involved in buying and using ovens.
The initial cost of a range with pyrolylic oven lie anywhere from
$100 to $ 250 more than a comparable range without self cleaning
oven. But for this money you're getting more the self clean feature.
You also get thicker, denser insulation, a special 110IL-Chilli
finish, better door sealing, and five to seven times as much chrome
plating on racks.
A typical oven clean cycle can use from eight to fourteen cents
electricity or gas per cleaning, depending on the length of the
oven cycle and the rates prevailing in your area. On a cost basis,
this compares very favorably with commercial chemical cleaners.
Also, the lower heal loss during normal operation actually reduces
operating costs us a whole in many cases.
Two facts must be emphasized about the cleaning operation. First
of all, no oven cleaning can occur at temperatures below 750 degrees
and even at this temperature it's a slow process. Most oven self-cleaners
operate within a range of 825 to 900 degrees F. Secondly, cleaning
is equally dependent upon time. The correct amount of time depends
upon the amount and types of soil in the oven. The burning, or oxidation,
purposely carried out slowly by the controlled application of heat
and oxygen. One and a half hours is a minimum time required to complete
the oven process and that under light soil conditions?
With these basic operational factors in mind, you're ready to take
a look at a malfunctioning pyrolytic oven. Remember that the appliances
always applies the old rule of "Stop, look, and listen"
before all else.
The tips and information that we have posted here is strictly
for educational purposes. This is because you deal with electricity
and mechanical systems, so you can easily injure yourself. The information
above is only for educational purpose and we don’t advise
anyone to do your own oven repair. For professional help call us
to schedule your repair appointment at our toll free number:
800-520-8445
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