How can I tell how old my Kenmore range is?
To estimate the age of your Kenmore range model 91193491991, we use the serial number (not the model number). The serial tag includes a date code that identifies the manufacturing week and year; once you read that code, you can pinpoint when the range was built.
Step 1: Find the model and serial tag
On most Kenmore electric ranges, the tag is typically found in one of these spots:
- On the oven frame behind the storage drawer (pull the drawer out)
- On the oven frame behind the lower kick panel
- Along the door frame area (visible when the oven door is open)
- On the back panel of the range
Write down both:
- Model: 91193491991
- Serial: (letters and numbers)
Step 2: Use the model prefix to identify the manufacturer
Kenmore model numbers use a 3-digit prefix to indicate who built the appliance.
| What to check | Example for your range | What it tells us |
|---|---|---|
| First 3 digits of model number | 911 | Manufacturer prefix used for serial decoding |
| Serial number | Varies | Contains the date code we decode |
Step 3: Decode the serial number date code
Once you know the manufacturer tied to the 911 prefix, decode the serial number using that manufacturer’s format. Most formats include:
- A letter that represents the month (or production line)
- A digit pair that represents the year
- A digit pair that represents the week of the year
If your serial number is hard to read, clean the tag gently and take a clear photo with the flash off.
Quick checks that help confirm the age
These clues do not replace serial decoding, but they help validate what you find:
- Style of control panel (knobs vs. electronic touch)
- Presence of a hot surface indicator light
- Oven light type and lens style (for example, the range oven light bulb 40A15 and wall oven light lens WB36X192 are common service parts on many older designs)
- Whether the oven uses a hidden bake element or exposed bake element
Why it matters
Knowing the build date helps us match the correct Kenmore range parts, avoid ordering the wrong bake element or temperature sensor, and decide whether a repair is cost-effective based on typical range lifespan.
Last updated: February 2026
Where can I find my Kenmore electric range model number?
On a Kenmore electric range like model 91193491991, the model number is printed on a rating label attached to the appliance frame. The most common spots are the oven door frame (door jamb) or the frame behind the storage drawer.
Most common label locations to check
- Open the oven door and look along the left or right door frame (door jamb area)
- Pull out the storage drawer and look on the frame behind the drawer opening
- Check the back panel near the power cord entry or rear vent area
- Look along the side frame just inside the lower front area
Quick steps (fastest way)
- Turn the oven light on and use a flashlight.
- Open the oven door and scan the frame edges for a white or silver sticker/plate.
- If you do not see it, slide out the bottom drawer and check the frame behind it.
What the label looks like (so you know you found the right one)
| What you’ll see | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| “Model” or “MOD” followed by numbers/letters | This is the exact model we use to match parts |
| “Serial” or “SER” | Helps date the unit and confirm production run |
| Electrical ratings (volts/amps) | Useful for safe troubleshooting and wiring checks |
Why it matters
We use the full model number to match the correct Kenmore range parts (for example, the correct bake element, terminal block, or oven light components). Even small model-number differences can change which parts fit.
If you are already ordering common items, having the model number handy helps confirm compatibility with parts like the range oven light bulb 40A15.
Last updated: February 2026
How do I troubleshoot my 91193491991?
For your Kenmore range model 91193491991, start troubleshooting by identifying whether the problem is in the oven (bake/broil), a surface burner, or the power supply. Most issues trace to a failed heating element, a bad control switch, a temperature sensor problem, or a loose power connection.
Step 1: Do a quick safety and power check
- Turn off the range at the breaker before inspecting wiring or removing panels.
- Confirm the range has the correct power (most electric ranges use 240 volts).
- If the display and oven light work but heating is weak or missing, one leg of power may be out.
- If you see scorching at the cord connection, inspect the terminal block.
Common power-connection part: Terminal block WB17T10006
Step 2: Match the symptom to the most likely cause
- Oven will not heat (bake): failed bake element, wiring issue, or control problem.
- Oven will not broil: failed broil element or wiring issue.
- Oven temperature is inaccurate: failed temperature sensor.
- One surface burner not heating: failed surface element or infinite switch.
- Oven light not working: burned-out bulb or failed socket.
| Symptom | What to check first | Common replacement part on this model |
|---|---|---|
| No bake heat | Bake element for visible damage or no glow | G.e. range bake element WB44T10010 |
| No broil heat | Broil element for damage | Range broil element WB44T10009 |
| Temp too hot/cold | Sensor connection and sensor resistance | Wall oven temperature sensor WB23X5340 |
| One burner dead | Swap element to another position, then test switch | Range coil surface element, 8-in WB03T10167 or range surface element control switch, 1,500-watt WB24T10029 |
| Oven light out | Bulb, then socket | Range oven light bulb 40A15 or range light socket WB08T10026 |
Step 3: Use error-code help when the control shows a code
If your control is flashing an error code, use our code list to narrow the failure to a sensor, keypad, or control circuit before replacing parts: Kenmore glass touch module electric range error codes.
Why it matters
Replacing the correct part the first time prevents repeat failures and helps protect key components like the wiring harness and control from overheating or arcing.
Last updated: March 2026




