Where is the model number on a Kenmore electric range?
On a Kenmore electric range like model 6289468890, the model number is usually on a rating label around the oven door opening or on the frame behind the storage drawer. If it is not there, check the back panel near the power cord and vent area.
Most common places to check
- Door jamb or frame around the oven opening (open the oven door and look along the sides)
- Behind the bottom storage drawer (pull the drawer out and look on the frame)
- Back of the range near the power cord entry and vent
- Side panel near the lower rear corner
- Under the cooktop lip on some coil-top designs (look along the front edge)
Quick steps to find it fast
- Turn the range light on and use a flashlight.
- Open the oven door and scan the left and right door frame first.
- Pull the storage drawer fully out and look for a paper or metal tag on the frame.
- If needed, carefully slide the range forward and check the back panel.
What the label looks like
| Label type | What it may say | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Paper sticker | Model and serial | Best for ordering exact Kenmore parts |
| Metal plate | Model and serial | Often easier to read after years of heat |
Why it matters
We use the full model number to match the correct wiring, burner element style, and oven components for your exact range. For example, surface heating parts like the element 316442301 can vary by size and terminal style even when ranges look similar.
If you are ordering parts, start with the parts list for model 6289468890 on this page; for broader model searches, use Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026
How do you reset a Kenmore electric stove?
To reset your Kenmore electric range model 6289468890, we recommend doing a hard power reset: turn the range off at the breaker (or unplug it), wait 1 minute, then restore power. This clears many control glitches and restores normal heating and burner operation.
Quick reset steps (safe, standard method)
- Turn all surface burner knobs to OFF.
- Switch the range circuit breaker OFF (or unplug the cord if accessible).
- Wait 60 seconds.
- Turn the breaker ON (or plug back in).
- Set the oven to Bake and confirm it heats; test one surface element.
If the reset does not fix the problem
A reset helps with temporary control issues, but it will not fix a failed heating circuit. These checks narrow down what is actually failing:
- If a surface burner will not heat, inspect the coil and receptacle for scorching or looseness.
- If the oven will not heat, watch for the bake element glowing; no glow often points to a failed element or wiring issue.
- If heat is erratic, a burner control switch can be the cause.
- If the range is completely dead, check the house breaker and the range power connection.
Common parts related to “no heat” symptoms
| Symptom | Most likely area | Example part on this model page |
|---|---|---|
| One surface burner not heating | Coil element or burner connection | Element 316442301 |
| Oven not baking | Bake heating circuit | Element 5303051519 |
| Burner stuck on high or won’t regulate | Infinite switch | Switch-8" el 5303935086 |
| Range dead or intermittent power | Power connection | Terminal block 5304409888 |
Why it matters
Resetting power is the fastest way to clear a “locked up” control or minor electrical glitch. If the symptom returns right away, focusing on the heating parts (element, switch, terminal block) prevents repeated shutdowns and helps restore safe, consistent cooking.
For additional troubleshooting and display-code help, use our DIY reference: Kenmore glass touch module electric range error codes. You can also order replacement parts for model 6289468890 from the parts list for this model, or search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026
Why is my Kenmore electric oven not working?
If your Kenmore electric range 6289468890 oven is not working (no bake, no broil, or no heat), the most common causes are a missing 240-volt supply, a failed heating element, or a burned connection at the power terminal block. Start with power, then test the elements.
Quick checks (fastest wins)
- Confirm the display is on and the oven is not in Control Lock, Delay Start, or Sabbath mode.
- Make sure the oven door is fully closed.
- Try both Bake and Broil; if neither heats, focus on power and control.
- If the cooktop works but the oven does not, you often have partial power (one breaker leg tripped).
Step-by-step troubleshooting
1) Verify full power to the range
Electric ovens need about 240 VAC to heat; you can have lights and surface burners with only 120 VAC.
- Reset the double breaker fully OFF, then ON.
- If you use a multimeter, check for about 240 VAC at the range connection.
- Inspect for heat damage or loose lugs; replace a damaged connection with the terminal block 5304409888.
2) Check the bake element (most common no-heat cause)
A cracked or open bake element stops heating.
- Look for blisters, cracks, or separated spots.
- Unplug power, then test continuity.
- Replace the bake element if open: element 5303051519.
Symptom guide
| What you see | Most likely cause | Best first check |
|---|---|---|
| Cooktop works, oven won’t heat | Partial 240 V, element failure | Breaker, terminal block, bake element |
| No heat on Bake, Broil works | Bake element | Bake element continuity |
| No display, nothing works | No power supply | Breaker, cord/terminal block |
Why it matters
Restoring full 240-volt power and fixing overheated connections prevents repeat failures and helps the oven heat safely and consistently.
You can order model-matched parts for Kenmore 6289468890 from the parts list for this range, or search by model on Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026
Where is the fuse on a Kenmore oven?
On the Kenmore 6289468890 electric range, there usually is not a single, user-serviceable “oven fuse.” The safety device people call a fuse is typically a high-limit thermostat or thermal cutoff located in the oven’s wiring circuit; you find it by tracing the bake and broil wiring rather than relying on one fixed spot.
Where to check first on an electric range
After shutting off power at the breaker, we recommend checking the most common access areas used on many Kenmore-style freestanding electric ranges.
- Rear access panel: components for oven power distribution and some safety devices are often accessible here
- Control area (behind the backguard/control panel): some models place safety cutoffs near the control wiring
- Oven cavity wiring points: follow the bake and broil element wires to where they connect into the harness
- Power cord connection area: inspect for heat damage at the terminal block 5304409888
Safe access steps (what we do in the field)
- Turn OFF the 240V breaker; confirm the cooktop and oven are dead
- Pull the range forward carefully to avoid stressing the cord
- Remove the rear panel screws; keep screws organized for reassembly
- Take a photo of wiring before disconnecting anything
- If you see melted wires or scorching, address that before replacing parts
What “fuse” might mean (and what it affects)
| What you may be looking for | What it does | Common symptom |
|---|---|---|
| Thermal cutoff (thermal fuse) | Opens permanently on overheat | Oven completely dead or no heat |
| High-limit thermostat | Opens on overheat (some reset, some do not) | Oven stops heating, may return later |
| House fuse/breaker | Protects the circuit feeding the range | Range dead or only partial power |
Why it matters
Looking for a single “fuse” can waste time. Tracing the bake and broil circuits and checking for overheated connections (especially at the terminal block) helps pinpoint whether the problem is a safety cutoff, wiring failure, or a heating component.
For model-specific replacement parts and diagrams, use the parts list for Kenmore 6289468890 on this model page, or search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026




