RCA L2B115GEL, L2B115GPL, L2B135GEL, L2B135GPL, L2B235GPL Use And Care Manual

...
I i
Anti-TipDevice 3,30
l?roblem Solver
22
.
Appliance Registration
Care and Cleaning
16-20
Clock/Timer 9
Safetv Instructions
2-5,23
Surface Cooking
8,9
Burner Grates
16,20
Burners
19,20
Consumer Services 35
Control Panel
16 Clock and Timer
Energy-Saving Tips
5 Control Settinm
Features 6,7
Cookware Titx
.
Flooring under the Range 24
Drip Pans
16,20
Grounding
27 Flame Size
Installation Instructions
23-31
Lighting Instructions
Warranty
Back Cover
Levelirw
29
Lift-up CooktoP
16
—1
Model and Serial Numbers 2,24
Oven
10,
U. BakindBakin~ Guide 12, 13 Broiling/Broiling Guide
15
Control Settings
H
Door Removal
16
Lighting Instructions
10
Preheating
5, 13 Roasting/Roasting Guide 14 Shelves
11,19,20
Thermostat Adjustment 21
Read this book Um!flmy.
Itisintendedtohelpyouoperateand maintainyournewrangeproperly.
Keepithandyforanswersto your
questions.
Ifyoudon’tunderstandsomething or needmorehelp, write (include yourphonenumber):
ConsumerRelations
AppliancePark Louisville,KY40225
down the model!
and serial
nlm’lbers.
You’llfindthem ona label located behindthestoragedrawerpanel on theleftside oftherange front frame.See page6.
Thesenumbers arealso on the
ConsumerProduct Ownership RegistrationCard that came with
yourrange. Beforesendingin this card, please writethese numbers
here:
Model Number
Serial Number
Usethese numbers in any correspondence or service cak concerningyour range.
rfea?iwxi
a range. e .
Immediatelycontactthedealer(or builder)thatsoldyoutherange.
save time and
money. Before you request service.
*
Checkthe ProblemSolveron
page22. It listscauses ofminor operatingproblemsthat
YOUcan
correctyourself.
Hyoll need service.
e
Toobtainservice, seethe ConsumerServicespage inthe back ofthisbook.
Toobtainreplacementparts, contactRCA/GEService Centers.
We’reproudof our serviceand wantyouto bepleased. If for some reasonyou arenot happywiththe serviceyou receive,here arethree stepsto followfor further help.
FIRST,contactthe peoplewho
serviced yourappliance. Explain whyyou are notpleased. In most cases, thiswill solve the problem.
NEXT, if youare stillnot pleased, write allthe details-including yourphone number—to:
Consumer Relations Appliance Park Louisville, Kentucky40225
FINALLY, ifyourproblem is still notresolved, write:
Major Appliance Consumer ActionPanel 20 North WackerDrive Chicago,Illinois 60606
Do or’use
.
- Pmo~rrm~sAF~TYmsTRucTIoNs
.-:
1
-.
he California Safe Drinking
WaterandToxicEnforcerne~t ActrequirestheGovernorof
California topublish a list of
substances knownto the state
tocauseca~cer,birthdefectsor
otherreproductiveharmand requiresbusinessestowarn customersofpotentialexposure
tosuchsubstances.
Gasappliancescancause minorexposuretofourofthese substances,namelybenzene,
carbonmonoxide,formaldehyde aridsoot,causedprimarilybythe incompletecombustionofnatural gasorLl?fuels.Properly
adjustedburners,indicatedbya
bluishratherthanayellowflame, willminimizeincomplete combustion.Exposuretothese
‘-!!!$
ubstancescanbeminimized
– furtherbyventingwithanopen
windoworusingaventilationfan
rhood.
YouG-etYour
@~~~~ the show you
the oftheH%qy?.gas’
fcmMlf’‘valveandhowtoshut
it
offii’necessary.
@
~~~&!your range
and bya
inaccordance
withthektdlation Instructionsd Anyadjustmentandserviceshould beperformedonlybyqualified
gasrangeinstallersor service technicians.
withaproperly-groundedthree­prongoutletinaccordancewith theNationalElectricalCode.Do notuseanextensioncordwith thisappliance.
mmtipad! i~”uryQmnkl I’W!.lkTo prevent accidental tippingofthe
range,attachit tothewallor floorby installingthe
Anti-Tipdevicesupplied.(%x InstallationInstructions.)To checkifthedeviceis installed
andengagedproperly,carefully tiptherangeforwarduntilit engagesthedevice.
Ifyoupulltherangeoutfromthe wallforanyreason,makesure thedeviceengagestherange whenyoupushtherangeback.
~~~ sure an
We removed from the range
beforeoperatingit,topreventfire orsmokedamageshouldthe packingmate~ialignite.
mngecanbeconvertedforuse
oneithertypeofgas.See
Instructions.
T (continued)
fkes.Never
pickup a&ning
pm.Turndf’bumier,then
smotherflamingpanbycovering panCmnpletelyWMlwell-fitting M,cookiesheet01flattray. Fkuninggreaseoutsideapan
canbeputoutbycoveringwith b~ingsodaor,ifavailable,a
multi-purposedryclNMlkXd orfoam-typefireextinguisher.
e ~~ ~g)~ $$~~fj
h an‘oven orm?w
the Do
notstoreoruse
gasolineorotherflammable vaporsandliquidsinthevicinity
ofthisoranyotherappliance.
@ml not M cookinggrease
Or other IMteriaki
inmI-Mar therange.
@ pm-k,follow
thedirectionsexactlyandalways
cookthemeattoaninternal temperatureofatleast170”F+. Thisassuresthat,intheremote
possibilitythattrichinamaybe presentinthemeat,itwillbe
kiliedandmeatwillbesafetoeat.
cookwarehandlestowardtheside orbackoftherangewithout extendingoveradjacentburners.
‘@Alwaysturn surface @ watchfoodsbeing
friedat high!flameSettinge @pJ~~~~~~~~~&@~@~@(~~~
oftherange.They providetheairinletandoutlet whichisnecessaryfortherange tooperateproperlywithcorrect combustion.
e~~ ~~t~~~~~~~~~~~~
surfaceifthewokhasa
ringwhichisphx’d Wertheburnergratetosupport thewok.Thisringactsasaheat
trapwhichmaydamagetheburner
grateandburnerhead.Also,it maycausetheburnertowork
improperly.Thismaycausea carbonmonoxidelevelabovethat allowedbycurrentstandards, resultingiriaheakhhazard.
@~o~~~f’r bea$
dryas Frostonfrozen foodsormoistureonfreshfoods cancausehotf%tobubbleupand oversidesofpan.
~use least of fatfor effective or deep” fatfrying.Ming thepantoofull offatcancausespilloverswhen
foodisadded. @If ~ of#J;]~~~
fatswillbeusedin stir togetherbeforeheating,orasfats
meltslowly. s Mw~ysheatM
and
watchasitheats. F2J~se deepfat
toprevent
fatbeyond.the
smokingpoint. oUSe~HWpW=pansize—-Avoid.
pans
thatare oreasily
tipped.Selectcookwarelarge enol.lgh$0
Contain.food,
toavoidboiloversaridspillovers, andwithbottomskirgeenough tocoverburnergrates.Thiswill bothsavecleaningandprevent hazardousaccumulationsoffood, sinceheavyspatteringorspillovers leftonrangecanignite.?Jsepans withhandlesthatcaneasilybe graspedandwiUremainCOOL
ISvyh~n UWhgg!kisscookware?
makesureitisdesignedfortop­of-rangecooking.
@KeeptallJ@astksawayfrom
tophmws.
@TOav~idthe Of
bums,alwaysbecertainthat thecmtrdsford burnersare d OFF andM grates am!cool to
thegrate.
@ foodsare
lm.kr the ‘km thefall
foff.Thefan,if may
spread
thef’lme.
e ~rqgfjiskmktedliWtWa
window9donotuselongcurtains whichCOUMblowoverthetop
burnersandcreatea firehazard.
@ a pilotgoesout9(m
modelssoequipped),youwill detecta faintodorofgasasyour
signaltorelightthepilot.V&m relightingpilot,makesureburner controlsarein,oOFFpositionand followinstructmnsdescribedOH followingpagestorelight.
e
If YOU SXIW gi3s9 and.youhive
alreadymakesurepilotsarelit, Wrnoffthegastotherangeand callaqualifiedservicetechnician. Neveruseanopenflametolocate aleak.
/
—$.
-k”
@&amiawayfromtherange
when
openingthedoorda hot
OveneThehotairorsteam
which escapes can cause Itmrmto hands, face andhr
eyes.
~Keepovenfreefromgrease
!
@Maceovenshehesindesired
position
while oven is cool.
@Pullingoutshelf tothe shelf
stopisaconvenienceinlifting
heavyfoods.Itisalsoa
precautionagainstburnsfrom touchinghotsurfacesofthe doororovenwake
~Do#~heat food
h theoven.Pressure
could upandthe
odd burstcausingan
62 ~s~ fo~!j
anywhereintheovenexceptas
h thisbook.Misuse
couldresultinafirehazardor damagetotherange.
* wingcookingW
bagsinoven,fobv
thernarwfiwturer’sdirections.
@U$eonly$$ass4XdKware
thatis foruse ingasovens.
~AIw~~sremovebroiler
pan
from Ibroik
as
soon8syoufinish
Greaseleftinthepancancatch fireifovenisusedwithout removingthegreasefromthe
broilerpan.
aVIWn ifmeatistoo
closetothefkm?,thefat may ignite.Trimexcessfattoprevent excessiveflare-ups.
@MakeSlw’ebroik?rpm
isin
placecorrectlytoreducethe
possibilityofgreasefires.
@Ifyou haveagrease
fireinthebroilerpan,turnoff
mm, andkeepovendoorclosed tocontainfireuntilitburnsc@.
@-&q! range Ckw andfree
of of’grease or
spimers which
mayignite.
* Daft torepair
orrepklceanypartofyour
rangetmkssit isspecifically
inthisbook.AH
otherserwicingshouldbereferred toaqualifiedtechnician.
.
SurfaceCooking
~Use cookwareof mediumweight aluminum, with tight-fittingcovers and with bottomsthat completely
coverthe heatedportion of the surface unit.
~Cook fresh vegetableswith a minimumamount of waterin a
coveredpan. ~wat& foodswhen bringing them
quicklyto cooking temperatures at highheat. When food reaches
cookingtemperature, reduce heat immediately to lowestsetting that
willkeep it cooking. e [Jse re~id~a]heat whenever
F=m
L
i ;.,:;yossible.For example, when ‘:--Y~ookingeggs in the she]~,bring
waterand eggsto boil, then turn
f~~~?OFF Position and ~ove~.with ]id
~~J complete the cooking.
~Alwaysturn surface unitoff
beforeremovingcookware.
@When boiling waterfor teaor coffee, heat onlyamount needed. It isnot economical to boila full container ofwater for only one or two cups.
owl-l Cwking
~Preheat the oven onlywhen
necessary. Most foods will cook satisfactorilywithout preheating.
If youfind preheating is necessary, put foodin the ovenpromptly after the ovenis preheated.
QAlwaysturn ovenoff before
removing food. ~During baking, avoid frequent
door openings. Keep door open as short a time as possible if it is opened.
~Cook completeovenmeals insteadofjust one fooditem. Potatoes,other vegetablesand somedesserts willcook together with amain-dish casserole, meat loaf, chicken or roast. Choose foodsthat cook at thesame temperature andin approximately the sametime.
@Use residual heatin oven wheneverpossible tofinish cookingcasseroles, oven meals, etc. Also add roHsor precooked dessertsto warm oven, using residualheat to warm them.
5
L2BU5GPL with
StandingPilotIgnition
LL?DILyi3wHMJ~ .B..J.42H.JAUCJUXK-JLJ
L2BIEWEL
withElectricIgnition
t
see L2BWGE%
page
L2BW5GEL
LU.M35GEL
L2B235GEL
1 BroilerDrawer
19
I
2 Model and SerialNumbers
.
3 Anti-TipDevice
4 RemovableOvenBottom
2
I
e
3,30
I
+i--+--
4s
——
5 Oven TemperatureControl
e
4 4
63
4 4
6 SurfaceBurner Controls
7 SurfaceBurners andGrates
8
I
4
16, 19
I
4
8 Oven Light Switch
(letsyouturn interiorovenlight
on andoff)
9 Clock and Timer
H
9
C9 60
DigitalDigital
1
10 OvenVent
11 Chrome-Plated Drip Pans
al
16,20
I
d
54
I
12 Lift-Up Cooktop
-3---+-
e
13 PorcelainEnamel OvenInterior 14 Continuous-CleaningOven Interior
1’7
1115 Oven Interior Light
16 Oven Shelves
e
2
1%
11, 19
2
“2
xl
(easily removedor repositioned
on shelf supports)
-­@
17 Oven Shelf Supports 11 I 18 RemovableOven Door
(easily removedfor ovencleaning)
19 Window
20
I
SJ
~o ~roilerpanand~ack
19,20
I
standingPM Model L2BI.15GPL
Thesurfaceburnersonthese ranges havestandingpilotsthatmustbelit initially.TOlight them:
L Besuresurfaceburnercontrol
knobsareintheOFF position.
2. Removethegratesand Iiftthe cooktopup(seepage 16).
3. Locatethetwopilotports and lighteachofthemwith amatch.
4. Lowerthe cooktop.Yoursurface
burners are nowready for use.
Ekctrk IgnitionModels
L2M15GEL L2M35GHJ L2B235GEL
Surfaceburners onthese rangesare lightedbyelectric ignition,e~ding theneedfor standingpilotswith constantlyburning flames.
hi caseofa power
outage,youcan
lightthepilotlessignitionsurface
burnerson yourrangewithamatch. Holdalighted matchto theburner, thenturntheknobtotheLITEposition.
use extreme caution when J@@~ng~urner$ in this mawn!er.
Surfaceburners in usewhen an electricalpoweroutageoccurs will continue to operate normally.
8
sd’’ux?EhmRer
Theknobsthatturn thesurface burnerson andoffare locatedon thelowercontrolpanel irifrontof theburners.
Thetwoknobsonthe left control theleilfrontand leftrear burners. Thetwoknobson therightcontrol therightfrontandrightrearburners.
ToLi@t a surfaceBummer’
How
toselect mimesize
The flamesizeon agasburner should match the cookwareyou are using.
FOR SAFEHANDLING OF COOKWARE,NEVER LET THE FLAMEEXTEND UP THE SIDES OF THE COOKWARE.Any flame largerthan thebottomofthe cookwareis wastedand only servestoheat the handles.
Pushthe controlknob inandturn it
When using aluminum or
toUTE. On electricignitionmodels,
almninum”ckwlstainless steel
youwillhear alittle clickingnoise—
pots and pans, adjustthe flameso
thesoundoftheelectricspark
the circleit makesisabout 1/2inch
ignitingtheburner.
smallerthan the bottomofthe cookware.
Afterthe burnerignites,turn the knobto adjustthe flamesize.
Note: @Do notoperatea burnerfor
extendedperiodsof timewithout havingcookwareon the grate.The finishon thegrate maychip without cookwareto absorbthe heat.
C+Check tobe sure theburner you
turnedon isthe one youwantto use.
~Be SUrethe burners and grates are COOIbeforeyouplace your hand, a pot holder, cleaning cloths or other materials on them.
Vi-Mmboiling, use this same flame size—1/2inch smallerthan the bottomof thecookware—no matterwhat the cookwareis made of. Foodscookjust as quickly ata gentleboil asthey do at afurious, rollingboil. A highboil creates steamand cooks awaymoisture, flavorand nutrition. Avoiditexcept for thefew cookingprocesses which need a vigorousboil.
when frying or
warmingfoods
instainless stw!lpaast ironor
enamelware keep the flame down lower—toabout 1/2the diameter of thepan.
when
fryinginglassor Wramic
cookware? lowerthe flame even more.
--
,
Ckdwvare
Aluminum:
Medium-weight cookwareisrecommendedbecause “theatsquicklyandevenly.Most
oocisblownevenlyin analuminum
skillet,Mineralsinfoodand water
.
willstainbutnotharm aluminum. Aquickscour witha soap-filled steel woolpad after each-usekeeps aluminumcookwarelookingshiny new.Use sauceDanswith ti~ht-
fittinglidsfor c~okingwit: minimumamountsof water.
Cast Eon: If heatedslowly,most skilletswillgive satisfactoryresults.
Emmdware: Under some
conditions, the enamel ofsome cookwaremaymelt.Followcookware manufacturer’srecommendations
forcookingmethods. Glass:There are twotypes ofglass
cookware—thosefor ovenuseonly andthosefor top-of-rangecooking (saucepans,coffeeand teapots). G1assconductsheat very slowly.
eatproof’CHassCeramic:Can
beusedfor either surfaceor oven
cooking.It conductsheat very
lowlyand coolsvery slowly.Check cookwaremanufacturer’sdirections tobesureitcanbe usedon gasranges.
StainlessSteel: Thismetalalonehas poorheatingproperties,andis usually combinedwith copper,aluminum
or othermetals forimprovedheat
distribution. Combinationmetal skii!etsgenerally worksatisfactorily ifused at mediumheat as the manufacturerrecommends.
and
clack
TosettheClock,turntheknob to
theleft until thewords“SETTIME” appearinthedisplay.Thenturnthe knobineitherdirectionuntilthe correcttimeisdisplayed.Aftera slightpause,timeisset.
mmer
&?Amswws
Q. Howcan I use myMinute Timerto makemysurface cockingeasier?
A. YourMinuteTimer will help
timetotalcookingwhichincludes timetoboilfoodandchange
temperatures.Do riotjudge
cookingtime byvisiblesteam only. Food will cookin covered containerseventhoughyoucan’t seeanysteam.
Q. CanI usethe MinuteTimer
duringovencooking?
A. TheMinuteTimercan be used
duringanycookingfunction.
Toset the Timer,turn theknob totherightuntil the words “SET TIMER” appear inthedisplay. Thenturn theknobin either
directionuntil thedesired time
(minutesand seconds)isdisplayed.
Thetimer willstartcountingdown.
Tocamel the timer,turn theknob
ineither directionuntil “0:00”
appearsinthedisplay.
Athe endoftk timeroperation,
afterthe 3beeps, thedisplayreturns
totimeofdayautomatically.During
thetimer function,thedisplay flashesbackto thetimeofday every 10seconds.
..—.—.—.——.——.—..—.— .——..
$=%
----
standing Pilot NhM L2BU5GPL
Thisrangehas astandingovenpilot
portthatmustbe litinitially.
T“ lightthe ovenpilot port:
1. Besure OVENCONTROL
knobis in theOFF position.
.2.Openthe broilerdrawerandpull
thedrawerdownflat. Put thebroiler pan inthelowestposition andslide thedrawerbackintothe range. This willmakeit easier foryou to reach
inside the broiler compartment.
\.\
3. Find the ovenpilot port at the
backof the broiler compartment. The longtube, running from front to back, is the ovenburner. The
pilotport is at the back, about one inch belowthe burner.
4. Usinga long match or match holder, reach in and light theoven pilot.
To light the oven burner: Turn the OVEN CONTROL knob to thedesired temperature.
Power =m@ge?An electrical power outagewiHnot affect the Iighted standingoven pilot.
Electric~gnithm
~OddS
L2BJ15GEL L21KL35GEL
L2B235GEL
Theovenpilotonthese rangesis lightedby electricignition,
3’0light.
theburner,turn
theOVENCONTROL knob to the desiredtemperature.The burner shouldlightwithin60 seconds.You willhear a little clickingnoise—the soundof theelectricspark igniting theburner.
Power outage? Althoughthe overdbroilerburner
ontheserangeswill notself-light
inthe eventofan electricalpower outage,a burnerin use whenan electricalpoweroutageoccurswill continueto operatenormally.
Tolight the ovenpilotduringan electricalpoweroutage,carefully
followthestepsbelow:
1. Besure OVENCONTROL knobisin theOFF position.
2. Openboththeovenandbroiler doorsandwait5 minutesto aHow
anypilotgasto dissipate.
3. Unplugthe rangefromthewall outlet,turn offthecircuitbreaker
orremovethefuseto avoidaccidental
ignitionofthe ovenif electrical
poweris restoredwhileyouare
lightingthe pilot.
4. Putthe broilerpan inthe lowest position.
5. Locatethe ovenpilotassembly
bylookingintothebroiler opening.
Thepilotisat thebackofthebroiler compartment, ontheleft sideof theburner.
Note:The ovenmustbeat room temperaturebeforeyoushould attempt to lightthe ovenpilot manually.
6. TurntheOVENCONTROLknob tothe desiredtemperature setting.
7. Lightthe pilotwith a match and withdrawyour arm immediately becausethe ovenburner maylight in aslittleas 20 seconds.
8. Closethe ovenand broilerdoors. Note: It isnecessary tolightthe
pilotmanually eachtime theoven isused during apoweroutage.
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