Does Maytag make gas ranges?
Yes. Maytag makes gas ranges, including the Maytag MGR6600PZ0 free standing gas range, which uses gas burners on the cooktop and a gas oven system for baking and broiling.
What you can expect from a Maytag gas range
Common features and benefits you will see across many Maytag gas range designs include:
- Gas cooktop burners for fast heat changes and strong simmer control
- A gas bake burner and gas broil burner for oven cooking
- Spark ignition components (electrodes and a spark module) to light burners
- Serviceable wear parts such as door hinges, door gasket, and igniters
Parts that support gas cooking on model MGR6600PZ0
If you are maintaining or troubleshooting ignition or oven heat issues, these model-matched parts are often involved:
- Module-spark W11162730 (helps generate spark for ignition)
- Range oven burner igniter WPW10333842 (ignites the oven burner)
- Electrode, bake W11524031 (creates spark at the bake burner)
| Symptom | Common area to check | Example model-matched part |
|---|---|---|
| Cooktop clicks but won’t light | Spark system, electrode wiring | Module-spark, bake electrode |
| Oven won’t heat or heats slowly | Oven ignition | Oven burner igniter |
| Door won’t close tightly | Door alignment, gasket, hinges | Door hinge, door seal |
Why it matters
Knowing Maytag makes gas ranges helps you shop the right Maytag parts and troubleshoot correctly. Gas ranges rely on ignition and burner components (not electric heating elements), so the right diagnosis saves time and prevents repeat failures.
Last updated: February 2026
Why is my Maytag gas oven not heating up?
If your Maytag MGR6600PZ0 gas range won’t heat in Bake, the most common cause is a weak or failed oven ignition system; the igniter can glow but still not pull enough current to open the gas valve. Start by checking for igniter glow and proper burner ignition.
Quick checks (before replacing parts)
- Confirm the oven is set to Bake (not Broil or Delay Start).
- Make sure the range has gas supply (other burners light normally).
- Listen for a steady “whoosh” of ignition within about 30 to 90 seconds of starting Bake.
- If the igniter glows but the burner never lights, treat it as a weak igniter in most cases.
- If nothing glows and there’s no ignition attempt, check wiring connections and controls.
What to look for by symptom
| Symptom | Most likely cause | What we recommend |
|---|---|---|
| Broil works, Bake does not | Bake igniter or bake ignition circuit | Inspect and test the bake igniter circuit; replace the igniter if weak |
| Bake igniter glows, no flame | Weak igniter (common) | Replace the igniter; it often fails “weak” before it fails “open” |
| No glow, no flame | Igniter open, wiring issue, control issue | Check harness connections; test igniter continuity and voltage |
| Intermittent heating | Loose connection, failing igniter, failing control | Inspect wiring, then test igniter and control output |
Parts that commonly fix “no heat on Bake”
For this model, these parts are often involved in Bake ignition problems:
- Range oven burner igniter WPW10333842 (most common)
- Electrode, bake W11524031 (if your model uses an electrode-style ignition at the bake burner)
- Module-spark W11162730 or spark module (red) WPW10475149 (if spark ignition is not firing correctly)
Why it matters
A gas oven needs a reliable ignition signal to open the gas valve safely. When the igniter is weak, the oven can act like it has “no heat” even though power and gas supply are OK.
Last updated: February 2026
How do I find the model number on my MGR6600PZ0?
For a Maytag free standing gas range like model MGR6600PZ0, the model number is printed on the appliance’s rating label, usually around the oven door frame or storage drawer area. Match the full model number exactly to ensure you get the right parts.
Where to look on a Maytag freestanding gas range
Check these common label locations (look for a sticker or metal plate with model and serial):
- Open the oven door; check the left or right front frame (the rim around the oven opening)
- Pull out the storage drawer; check the frame behind the drawer front
- Check the lower side trim near the front leveling legs
- If your range has a warming drawer, check the frame behind it
What the label looks like and what to copy
The rating label typically includes:
- Model number (copy it exactly, including any letters and the final digit)
- Serial number (helpful for production date and correct revisions)
- Gas type and electrical rating (useful for troubleshooting)
Why the exact model number matters
Maytag ranges often use different igniters, spark modules, door hinges, and control parts across close model variations. Using the exact model number helps us match the correct diagrams and compatible parts.
| If you see… | Do this | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| MGR6600PZ0 | Use it as-is | This is the full model identifier |
| Missing last character | Re-check the label carefully | One character can change the parts list |
| Label worn or unreadable | Compare your range’s door hardware to parts diagrams | Confirms the correct revision |
Quick part-based cross-check (optional)
If you are already replacing a door part, matching it to the parts list can help confirm you are in the right place:
- Oven door not closing evenly: check hinge style such as range oven door hinge WPW10299224 or range oven door hinge WPW10299227
- Door seal heat leaks: check the seal, door W11542153
Last updated: March 2026




