How to work a KitchenAid induction cooktop?
The KitchenAid KECD807XSS00 is a radiant (ceramic-glass) downdraft electric cooktop, not an induction cooktop. You operate it by turning the surface element knob to the heat setting you want, then adjusting as the element cycles to maintain temperature; detailed control and care steps are in the owner's manual.
- Place a flat-bottom pan centered on the cooking zone.
- Turn the matching control knob from OFF to your desired setting.
- Start on a higher setting to preheat, then reduce to maintain a simmer.
- Keep the cooktop surface dry; moisture can cause sticking and harder cleanup.
- After cooking, turn the knob back to OFF and let the hot surface cool.
Your cooktop includes a built-in downdraft ventilation system. After installation, airflow is typically checked with the Flow Tester Card referenced in the installation guide.
- Turn the vent on before or as you start cooking.
- Use higher vent speed for frying or heavy smoke.
- Keep the vent intake area clear of foil, towels, and oversized pans.
- Clean or replace the grease filter regularly to keep airflow strong.
- Confirm the control knob is not loose or cracked; a worn knob can fail to turn the switch fully (see range surface burner knob W10298840).
- Check your home breaker or fuse; a tripped breaker can disable one or more elements.
- If one element stays cold, the element or its control switch can be the cause (examples include cooktop element control switch WPW10222828 or a radiant element such as range radiant surface element W11171119).
We recommend cleaning after the surface cools. For stuck-on spills, use a scraper designed for ceramic glass (see cooktop scraper WA906B).
| Task | What to use | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Daily wipe-down | Mild household cleaner + warm water | Prevents baked-on residue |
| Burned-on spills | Cooktop scraper | Removes debris without gouging |
| Vent performance | Clean grease filter | Maintains airflow and reduces odors |
Radiant cooktops heat differently than induction. Using the correct cookware, keeping the glass clean, and maintaining the downdraft filter helps you get steadier heating, fewer hot spots, and better ventilation.
You can order KECD807XSS00 replacement parts from the parts list for this model, or search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026
What type of KitchenAid do I have?
You have a KitchenAid KECD807XSS00, which is a 30-inch electric downdraft cooktop. The most reliable way to confirm the exact type is to match the model number and serial number from the appliance ID label to the information in the KECD807XSS00 owner's manual.
We use the model number to match the correct parts list, wiring, and installation specs.
- Look for the model and serial tag on the cooktop (commonly under the unit, on the underside of the chassis, or near the downdraft vent area).
- Write down the full model number exactly as shown (for this page, it is KECD807XSS00).
- Record the serial number too; it helps confirm production details when ordering parts.
- If the label is hard to read, take a clear photo and zoom in.
- Use the model number to match the correct component style (radiant element, dual element, control switch, wire harness).
For KitchenAid cooktops, “type” usually refers to the cooking surface and ventilation style.
| Identification detail | What it tells you | Example for this model |
|---|---|---|
| Model number | Exact parts and diagrams | KECD807XSS00 |
| Cooktop style | Heating method | Electric radiant elements |
| Venting | How it removes smoke/steam | Built-in downdraft vent |
| Size class | Cutout and fit | 30-inch cooktop |
Using the correct model number prevents ordering the wrong radiant surface element, element control switch, or downdraft vent parts. For example, this model uses specific components like the cooktop downdraft vent grease filter W10177003 and matching control switches.
After you confirm the model number from the ID tag, order replacement parts from the parts list for KECD807XSS00, or search by model on Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026
What is the average lifespan of KECD807XSS00?
A KitchenAid 30-inch electric downdraft cooktop like model KECD807XSS00 typically lasts 13 to 15 years with normal household use and routine cleaning. Keeping the glass top protected and the downdraft vent filter clean helps this cooktop reach its full service life.
Most radiant electric cooktops wear based on heat cycles, spills, and ventilation load. The biggest factors are:
- Heavy daily high-heat cooking (more element cycling)
- Boilovers that bake onto the glass and trap heat
- Running the downdraft fan often without cleaning the grease filter
- Loose or worn knobs and switches that cause inconsistent control
- Power surges or repeated overheating events
On downdraft radiant cooktops, the most common wear items are the heating and control components.
| Component | What you notice | Common fix |
|---|---|---|
| Radiant surface element | Burner will not heat, heats unevenly | Replace the element |
| Infinite control switch | Heat stuck high/low, burner cycles oddly | Replace the switch |
| Downdraft grease filter | Weak airflow, more smoke/odors | Clean or replace filter |
| Knob | Cracked, loose, hard to set | Replace knob |
If a burner is not heating or is heating erratically, parts like the cooktop radiant element WPW10221529 or a control switch are often involved.
Follow the care and cleaning guidance in the KECD807XSS00 owner's manual. These habits make the biggest difference:
- Clean spills promptly after the surface cools
- Use a ceramic-glass cleaner and a non-scratch pad
- Use a scraper correctly for cooked-on residue (avoid gouging)
- Keep cookware bottoms flat and clean to prevent hot spots
- Remove and clean the downdraft grease filter regularly
A cooktop that is kept clean and ventilated runs cooler internally, which reduces stress on radiant elements, wiring connections, and control switches. That directly improves reliability and helps avoid premature part replacement.
Last updated: March 2026





