Are microwave convection oven combos worth it?
Yes, a microwave convection oven combo is usually worth it when you want one built-in unit that can microwave and also brown or crisp food using convection. For Kenmore Elite model 79048903000, the best way to confirm which cooking modes and accessories you have is to check the 79048903000 owner’s manual.
When a combo is a good value
A combo unit tends to be “worth it” if you’ll actually use both the microwave and convection features regularly.
- You want to save cabinet or countertop space with a built-in wall unit
- You like faster cooking with better browning than a standard microwave
- You want one appliance for reheating, baking, roasting, and crisping
- You cook multiple dishes at once and want a second cooking cavity available
- You prefer a cleaner, integrated look versus a countertop microwave
Tradeoffs to consider
Combo units are convenient, but they are not the best fit for every kitchen.
- Higher upfront cost than a basic microwave
- Smaller convection cavity than a full-size wall oven
- More electronics and door-safety components to maintain over time
- Repairs can be more involved because the unit is built-in
Quick comparison
| Feature | Microwave convection combo | Standard microwave | Full-size wall oven |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reheat speed | Fast | Fast | Slow |
| Browning/crisping | Good | Poor | Excellent |
| Capacity | Medium | Medium | Large |
| Best for | Multi-function cooking | Simple reheating | Baking/roasting big loads |
Why it matters
If you use convection features (crisping, roasting vegetables, browning meats), a combo can replace several small appliances and speed up weeknight cooking. If you mostly reheat leftovers, a standard microwave often delivers the same results for less.
Last updated: January 2026
What are the disadvantages of a microwave oven combo?
A microwave/wall oven combo like the Kenmore Elite 79048903000 saves cabinet space, but the tradeoffs are usually higher purchase and repair cost, less flexibility than separate units, and more complicated cleaning and service when one section has a problem. Review features and operating limits in the 79048903000 owner’s manual.
Common disadvantages to plan for
- Higher total cost than buying a basic wall oven and a countertop microwave.
- Single cutout dependency: you are locked into a specific cabinet opening size and trim style.
- If one section fails, your kitchen loses two functions (microwave and oven) until it’s repaired.
- More complex repairs: combo units pack more electronics, sensors, and safety switches into one chassis.
- Cleaning can take longer: more vents, door surfaces, and trim seams to wipe down.
- Capacity tradeoff: the microwave cavity is typically smaller than many over-the-range or countertop models.
Repair and downtime considerations (what we see most)
Combo units often rely on multiple interlocks and control boards. If the microwave stops heating or won’t run, common culprits can include a door safety switch or fuse. If the oven temperature is inaccurate, a sensor is a frequent starting point.
| Symptom | What it can mean | Example part for this model |
|---|---|---|
| Microwave won’t start when door is closed | Door interlock issue | Microwave door interlock switch 5304493153 |
| Microwave dead (no display or sudden shutdown) | Fuse or power interruption | Microwave fuse 5304480634 |
| Oven bakes unevenly or temp seems off | Temperature sensing problem | Range oven temperature sensor 5304504897 |
Why it matters
With a combo, convenience and a built-in look come with a “single point of failure.” Planning for access, service clearance, and realistic repair costs helps you decide whether a combo fits how you cook.
Last updated: January 2026
What is a combo wall oven?
A combo wall oven is a built-in appliance that combines two cooking appliances in one cabinet cutout, typically a microwave on top and a traditional wall oven below. For Kenmore Elite model 79048903000, it is a wall oven/microwave combination designed to be installed as a single unit (not stacked separately). See the 79048903000 installation guide for installation and cutout requirements.
What “combo” means for this Kenmore Elite unit
A combination wall oven gives you two separate cooking cavities with different cooking methods, so you can cook more than one item at a time.
Common benefits include:
- Saves cabinet space versus two separate built-in appliances
- Lets you microwave and bake at the same time
- Keeps the microwave at a built-in height (no countertop footprint)
- Provides a cleaner, integrated kitchen look
- Often shares a single electrical connection and mounting system
Typical functions you may see
Exact feature sets vary by model and trim level; the defining feature is having both a microwave and an oven in one built-in frame.
| Cavity | What it’s for | Typical modes |
|---|---|---|
| Upper cavity | Fast cooking and reheating | Microwave, sensor cooking, timed cook |
| Lower cavity | Traditional baking/roasting | Bake, broil, convection (on some models) |
Why it matters
Knowing you have a combo unit helps with planning electrical supply, cabinet cutout sizing, and parts selection. For example, microwave door safety parts like the microwave door interlock switch 5304493153 are specific to the microwave section, while oven heating parts are specific to the lower oven.
Last updated: January 2026





