Does Maytag make gas ranges?
Yes. Maytag makes gas ranges, and your Maytag MGT8885XS01 is a gas freestanding range. Maytag gas ranges are built for everyday cooking with gas surface burners and a gas oven system; use the MGT8885XS01 installation guide for gas supply and setup requirements.
A gas range uses gas for the burners and typically uses an igniter system to light the oven burner.
- Surface burners use a gas valve and ignition system to light and control flame
- The oven uses an igniter to light the bake burner
- A gas pressure regulator is required for proper operation
- The range can be set up for Natural gas, or converted to LP gas by a qualified technician
Your installation instructions specify that the range is factory set for Natural gas and can be converted to LP gas by a qualified service technician. The gas pressure regulator inlet pressure should be within these ranges:
| Gas type | Minimum inlet pressure | Maximum inlet pressure |
|---|---|---|
| Natural gas | 5" WCP | 14" WCP |
| LP gas | 11" WCP | 14" WCP |
If the oven will not heat, the issue is often the bake igniter or related ignition components, not the gas supply itself.
- Confirm the gas shutoff valve is fully open
- Verify power to the range (oven igniters need electricity)
- Watch for the igniter to glow during bake
- If the igniter glows weakly or not at all, replacement is common
- For a known-good replacement part, use the whirlpool range bake igniter W11596211
Knowing Maytag makes gas ranges helps you shop the right parts and follow the correct installation rules (gas type, regulator pressure, shutoff valve access). That prevents no-heat symptoms, poor burner performance, and ignition failures.
Last updated: February 2026
What are the most common issues with MGT8885XS01?
The most common issues we see on the Maytag MGT8885XS01 gas freestanding range involve ignition problems (surface burners or oven not lighting), uneven baking or broiling, and control or door hardware wear. Many of these symptoms trace back to igniters, burner parts, or the electronic control.
- Surface burner clicks but won’t light: dirty burner ports, misaligned cap/head, or a failing igniter switch.
- Oven won’t bake (no heat): weak bake igniter or burner ignition issue.
- Oven won’t broil or heats inconsistently: ignition or gas flow issues, sometimes control-related.
- Uneven flames or yellow flames: burner head/cap not seated, clogged ports, or airflow issues.
- Buttons not responding or display acting up: membrane switch or electronic control concerns.
If troubleshooting points to a failed component, these are frequent replacements for this model:
| Symptom | Common part to check | Example part on this model page |
|---|---|---|
| Oven won’t bake | Bake igniter | Range bake igniter W11596211 |
| Oven burner won’t ignite reliably | Oven burner igniter | Range oven burner igniter WPW10324738 |
| Burners won’t spark consistently | Igniter switch assembly | Range surface burner igniter switch assembly WPW10204718 |
| Burner flame uneven | Cap/head alignment or wear | Burner head WPW10406243 and range surface burner cap WPW10171140 |
- Turn off power at the breaker before inspecting electrical ignition parts.
- Remove and reseat the burner cap and burner head; clean ports with a soft brush.
- Listen for sparking at the surface burners; constant clicking often indicates moisture or a switch issue.
- For oven bake issues, watch for a glow from the igniter; a weak igniter can glow but still not open the gas valve.
- Review the lighting and cleaning instructions in the MGT8885XS01 owner’s manual to avoid damaging burner components.
Gas ignition and flame quality affect cooking performance and safety. Fixing ignition, burner, or control problems early helps prevent no-heat situations, poor baking results, and repeated clicking or delayed ignition.
Last updated: March 2026
Why is my Maytag gas oven not heating up?
On the Maytag MGT8885XS01 gas freestanding range, the most common reasons the oven will not heat are a closed gas shutoff valve, a power supply issue, or a weak oven igniter that glows but does not get hot enough to light the burner within about 60 seconds. Use the installation guide start-up checks first.
- Confirm the range is plugged into a grounded 3-prong outlet.
- Check the circuit breaker or household fuse.
- Verify the gas supply line shutoff valve is fully open.
- Start BAKE, press START, and watch for “Preheating” on the display.
- Look through the oven bottom openings for igniter glow; the bake burner should light (sometimes it can take up to 60 seconds).
| What you see | Most likely cause | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| No igniter glow on BAKE | Power issue, wiring issue, or failed igniter | Recheck power; then inspect igniter and harness |
| Igniter glows but burner never lights | Weak igniter not drawing enough current to open the gas valve | Replace the bake igniter (common fix) |
| Broil works but bake does not | Bake-side igniter or bake circuit problem | Focus on bake igniter and connections |
| Neither bake nor broil lights | Gas supply off or broader control/power issue | Confirm shutoff valve and power; then service |
If your bake igniter glows inconsistently, takes longer than about a minute to light, or never lights the burner, replacing the igniter is the most common repair.
A gas oven needs electric power for the control and igniter. The igniter must heat up enough to allow gas flow and ignition; if it is weak, you can see a glow but still get no heat or very long preheat times.
Last updated: February 2026




