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Admiral Electric cooktops

Official Admiral electric cooktop parts

Admiral electric cooktops are known for their dependability and heating performance. Advanced controls on Admiral electric cooktops accurately control burner heat so the dishes you cook turn out perfect every time. When your Admiral electric cooktop isn't working, find the replacement parts you need to fix the cooktop at Sears PartsDirect.

Frequently bought Admiral parts

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Replacing a radiant surface element in your Admiral electric cooktop

  • Shut off the house circuit breakers for the cooktop or unplug the cooktop to disconnect electrical power.
  • Remove the screws from the brackets that hold the cooktop in the counter. Carefully lift the cooktop up and set it on the counter.
  • Remove the screws that secure the glass top to the burner box. Lift the glass top off of the burner box and set it on a protected surface.
  • Carefully remove the wires from the element. Release the locking tabs on the mounting bracket for the radiant element and remove the bracket. Pull the radiant element off of the main glass top and discard the radiant element.
  • Position the new radiant element on the cooktop and secure it with the mounting bracket. Connect the wires to the new element.
  • Position the glass top on the burner box and secure it with the mounting screws.
  • Lower the cooktop into the counter. Reinstall the mounting bracket screws.
  • Turn on the electric power to the cooktop.

Troubleshooting your Admiral electric cooktop when a surface element doesn't heat

On a cooktop that uses surface element switches to control the elements, a failed surface element switch can prevent the surface element from heating. On electronically-controlled cooktops, a failed surface element relay on the electronic control board that controls surface elements can keep a surface element from heating.

No matter which type of control your cooktop uses, a broken surface element won't heat. If your cooktop uses coil surface elements, examine the element that isn't heating and replace the coil element if you see a cracked or broken coil. Radiant surface elements are harder to check for damage because they're under the glass cooktop. Unplug the cooktop and remove the burner box to access and check a radiant surface element that isn't heating. Replace the surface element if you see a break in the ribbon element.

A radiant surface element has a limiter switch that cycles the radiant element off to protect the ceramic glass cooktop from overheating. A failed limiter switch won't allow the radiant element to heat. Disconnect electric power to the cooktop and check for continuity through the limiter switch using a multimeter. You should measure near 0-ohms of resistance through the limiter switch indicating that the switch is allowing current to flow through the element. If you measure OL or "open load" indicating that the switch isn't allowing current to flow through the element, then the limiter switch has failed. The limiter switch is often included with a radiant element but not always. Replace the limiter switch if it's a separate part and it's preventing the radiant surface element from heating. If the limiter isn't available as a separate part, replace the radiant surface element.