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Case study · Microwave
Whirlpool Over-the-Range Microwave: Door Switch + Magnetron
Appliance: Whirlpool over-the-range microwave
Location: Babylon, NY
Over-the-range microwaves get the most punishment of any microwave — they sit over a hot stove, run a vent fan, and are generally used twice a day. When this Whirlpool stopped heating, it had two failures: a worn-out door interlock switch and a tired magnetron. Diagnosing one without finding the other is a common mistake.
1. The problem
- ·Microwave ran (turntable spun, light came on) but food came out cold.
- ·Door felt slightly loose in the latch — customer thought it was just cosmetic.
- ·Microwave was a Whirlpool over-the-range, about 9 years old.
2. Diagnosis
- ·Tested the door interlock switches — primary switch was failing intermittently. Microwaves WILL NOT heat if the door circuit isn't satisfied. Safety feature.
- ·But also tested the magnetron with a high-voltage probe — magnetron was producing weak output. Not fully dead, but on the way out.
- ·Both needed to be replaced — fixing only the door switch would have made the microwave run, but it would still heat poorly.
3. The fix
- ·Discharged the high-voltage capacitor before doing anything (microwaves can hold lethal voltage even unplugged — this is why DIY microwave repair is dangerous).
- ·Replaced the primary door interlock switch.
- ·Replaced the magnetron with the OEM Whirlpool part.
- ·Replaced the high-voltage diode at the same time (cheap part, fails along with the magnetron typically).
- ·Tested with a cup of water — boiled in the expected time. Confirmed the microwave was back to full power output.
Tip from Rodney
Microwaves contain a high-voltage capacitor that can kill you even when unplugged. Door switches are sometimes a DIY job; magnetrons are not. Call us — we have the discharge tools and know the safety procedure.
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