It could be bad wiring, bad circuit board or bad heating element.
First, check for loose wires.
Then, check the element. The best way to check the element is to connect it directly to 110. I would suggest a professional for this. By wiring it directly to a 110 plug you can check the amps while bypassing the circuit board (for troubleshooting purposes). If the heating element pulls aproximatly 3 amps, it's not the element. Do not leave it directly wired. It will drop your fridge temp in the 20s-30s over night and freeze all of your goodies.
If the heating element reads proper amps, then it is most likely your circuit board.
Hi there,
Since the refrigerator works by heating a chamber by either a gas burner or an electric heating element, the heating element is faulty.
It could also be an electrical connection somewhere that is faulty.
The heating element is located behind some sheet metal covering and insulation just above the gas burner area.
Thanks
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