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KitchenAid KFEG500ESS7 free standing electric range

KitchenAid KFEG500ESS7 free standing electric range Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for KitchenAid KFEG500ESS7 free standing electric range, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

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KitchenAid Free Standing Electric Range KFEG500ESS7 FAQs

An electric oven in your KitchenAid KFEG500ESS7 range is built around heating, airflow, lighting, and control components. The most common parts you will see are the bake element (bottom heat), broil element (top heat), oven light parts, wiring connections, and venting that moves heat and moisture out safely.

Core electric oven parts (what they do)

  • Bake element: Primary heat source for baking and roasting; mounted at the bottom of the oven cavity.
  • Broil element: High-heat top element used for broiling and browning.
  • Oven temperature sensor: Tells the control how hot the oven is so it can cycle heat accurately.
  • Electronic control and user interface: Sets bake/broil/convection modes and manages temperature.
  • Oven light and lens: Lets you see food without opening the door; the lens protects the bulb from heat and splatter.
  • Vent and vent tube: Routes hot air and moisture out of the oven area.

Parts on this model that match common oven components

If you are troubleshooting heat, lighting, or electrical connection issues on KFEG500ESS7, these model-matched parts are commonly involved:

Quick “symptom to part” guide

Symptom Most likely area Example part on this model
Oven will not heat in Bake Bake heating circuit Bake element W10779716
Oven light not working (lens damaged) Light cover area Light lens WP3196068
Range dead or intermittent power Power cord connection point Range terminal block WPW10245259

Why it matters

Knowing the main oven parts helps you narrow a problem fast. For example, a no-bake complaint usually points to the bake element or its wiring, while a totally dead range often points to the terminal block or a power supply issue.

Ordering the right part

  • Match the model number KFEG500ESS7 before ordering.
  • Compare the part name and ID to what you need (element vs switch vs harness).
  • Use the parts list for this model first; for broader model searches, use Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

The KitchenAid KFEG500ESS7 free standing electric range is built around a large-capacity oven with convection cooking and a multi-element cooktop, including a dedicated warm zone. It also includes convenience features like a storage drawer and a hidden bake element design.

Key cooking features

  • Convection cooking (Even-Heat True Convection style performance)
  • Large oven capacity (commonly listed around 6.4 cu. ft. for this model family)
  • Five cooking elements on the cooktop
  • Warm zone element for holding foods at serving temperature
  • Hidden bake element design (easier oven-floor cleanup)

What you can replace if a feature stops working

If a cooking feature is not heating correctly, we typically start by checking the heating circuit and the most common wear parts.

  • Oven not baking evenly or not heating: inspect the bake element W10779716
  • Surface element not heating or cycling oddly: check the element and the control switch
  • Intermittent power or signs of overheating at the cord connection: inspect the range terminal block WPW10245259

Quick feature to part mapping

Feature area What you notice Common part to check
Bake (oven) No heat, slow preheat, uneven baking Bake element
Radiant cooktop One burner not heating Surface element or switch
Power connection Burning smell, melted wires at rear Terminal block
Holding/low heat Warm zone not warming Switch or element (by position)

Why it matters

Matching the feature to the correct circuit (bake, broil, convection fan, radiant element, or warm zone) helps you choose the right troubleshooting steps and order the right KitchenAid replacement part the first time. For additional parts and diagrams for KFEG500ESS7, use the parts list for this model or search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

If your KitchenAid KFEG500ESS7 electric oven is not getting hot enough, the most common causes are a weak bake heating circuit (bake element, wiring, or power connection) or a temperature-sensing/control issue that makes the range cycle off too soon. Start with temperature verification, then test the bake circuit.

Quick checks first

  • Confirm you are using Bake (not Keep Warm) and allow 15 to 25 minutes to preheat.
  • Keep the door closed during preheat; frequent openings slow recovery.
  • Verify the door closes fully and the gasket seals.
  • Check temperature with an oven thermometer and average 3 cycles (after preheat).
  • If broil heats normally but bake is weak, focus on the bake circuit.

What to test (most common fixes)

Bake element

A bake element can look normal yet heat weakly.

  • Unplug the range or shut off the breaker.
  • Inspect for blisters, cracks, or burned spots.
  • Check continuity with a meter.

If it is damaged or open, replace the bake element W10779716.

Power supply and terminal block

A loose or heat-damaged connection can reduce voltage to the oven.

  • With power off, inspect the cord connection area for discoloration or melted wiring.
  • Tighten loose connections; replace any heat-damaged parts.

A common failure point is the range terminal block WPW10245259.

Symptom-to-cause guide

What you notice Most likely cause Best next step
Slow preheat Weak bake element or low voltage Test bake element; inspect terminal block
Bake is low, broil is strong Bake circuit problem Check element and wiring to element
Temps seem off but heat works Calibration or sensor/control issue Verify average temp; then diagnose sensor/control

Why it matters

Accurate oven temperature improves baking results and helps food cook safely; fixing a weak heating circuit also helps prevent overheated wiring.

You can order KFEG500ESS7 parts from the parts list for this model, or search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

Most common symptoms to help you fix your ranges

Choose a symptom to see related range repairs.

Main causes: power supply failure, blown thermal fuse, bad relay control board, damaged terminal block, wiring failure…

Main causes: broken broiler element, weak or broken broil burner igniter, control system failure, faulty temperature sen…

Main causes: power supply problem, control thermostat or electronic control board failure, broken element, bad burner ig…

Main causes: broken oven door lock assembly, wiring failure, electronic control board problem…

Main causes: faulty temperature sensor, electronic control board problem, control thermostat failure, weak burner ignite…

Main causes: bad bake element, broken burner igniter, control system failure, blown thermal fuse, faulty temperature sen…

Main causes: food splatters, spilling food on the oven door, allowing liquid to drip through oven door vent when cleanin…

Most common repair guides to help fix your ranges

These step-by-step repair guides will help you safely fix what’s broken on your range.

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How to replace a range oven door switch

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Repair time and Difficulty

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How to replace a range oven door lock assembly

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Repair time and Difficulty

 15 minutes or less

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