20 Most Recent
Jenn-Air JCD2389G Side by Side Refrigerator - Page 4 Questions & Answers
Jenn-Air JCD2389G Side by Side Refrigerator Damper
Not knowing exactly how you broke it off, its hard to say just how its supposed to go back on. Since these are usually screwed into place, or in some cases its a snap tight fit, something is definitely broken, and you will likely need to replace the damper door. If you do not fix this properly, you will not be able to adjust the fresh food temperatures, and in fact you may freeze your refrigerated food, or it may be not cold enough to keep food fresh at all.
3/22/2013 8:25:06 PM •
Jenn-Air...
•
Answered
on Mar 22, 2013
Jenn air side by side JCD2389GES ****** still won
If there are only a few rows producing cold from the freezer it may be a
Freon leak. Remove the rear panel inside the back wall of your freezer and
examine the frost pattern. When a refrigerator has enough Freon it will have
the complete evaporator covered with frost. Here is a photo of what a frost
pattern looks like with only a few rows.
Frost Pattern Only Two Rows
Click photo to enlarge
Unfortunately if this is what you see with evaporator
exposed you will be better off shopping for a new replacement refrigerator
because the cost to repair is just not worth the expense to have someone repair
your refrigerator. If you have questions please ask, Thanks Sea Breeze
9/12/2012 1:54:54 AM •
Jenn-Air...
•
Answered
on Sep 12, 2012
Leaks at the bottom-daily water drains at different times
Things go back together in the reverse order.In our Jenn Air JCD2B89GES side by side the freezer drain was clogged/frozen shut. It is in an aluminum tray that you access by taking out the shelves and then taking off the back panel inside the freezer (two 1/4' hex head screws.) You lift up the top plastic panel (with the "bulge" in it )and that lets you remove the lower plastic panel (the one with the louver vents at the bottom.) After melting the ice with small applications of hot water, the drain hole was visible. Again, apply some hot water, remove it, add some more, etc. and the drain opened and the water gurgled down to where it is designed to go (which I assume is the evaporator tray.) I took the precaution of adding the suggested copper wire "prevention" mod described
here.One additional suggestion. If you have the ice maker I would suggest emptying out all the ice after you're done. In the short time it takes to unclog the drain, some of the ice will partially melt. I assume that when it refreezes, you'll have a big block of stuck together ice cubes to deal with. Of course, I did the "repair" with the unit unplugged.
9/8/2012 2:35:20 PM •
Jenn-Air...
•
Answered
on Sep 08, 2012
I have a jenn-air jcd2389ges. The hole in the door where the ice comes down into your cup is broken. i believe the foam piece is busted
Here is a kit of the most likely parts that you are talking about=>
12001991 Ice Dispenser Solenoid and Door Kit Just disconnect the power and turn water off before beginning to ddisassemble the fispenser components seen here=>
JCD2389GES Dispenser Components 1. Unplug the refrigerator power cord.2. Remove the overflow grille from the housing.3. Unsnap front cover at the bottom of the housing. (using a flat blade screwdriver, and tape or pad, twist the screw driver, or pry out the bottom trim using the molded slots in the bottom of the trim panel).4. Disconnect the front cover switch harness connector and set the cover aside.5. Disconnect the power wire harness connector (BL/BK and W wires)6. Disconnect the flapper door heater wire harness connector (if one is present).7. Release the dispenser microswitch retainers and slide the switches off of their locator pins. Carefully handle the switches so they do not come apart.8. Disconnect the wires from the terminals of the lamp holder.9. Remove the two 1/4. hex head screws from the control bracket and remove the control bracket.10. Remove the 1/4. hex head screw to remove the water fitting (fill spout) from the water dispenser lever.11. Unsnap the ice guide and remove it from the ice dispenser lever.12. Remove the air pot by sliding the rear of the air pot out of the slot molded to the dispenser housing and slip the linkage out of the flapper door mechanism assembly.13. Unsnap the flapper door and remove it from the ice dispenser lever. While you remove the flapper door, carefully guide the flapper door heater wire and connector over the door mechanism assembly.14. Remove the 1/4. hex head screw securing the dispenser levers pivot retainer to the dispenser housing and remove the retainer.15. Remove the water dispenser lever.16. Remove the ice dispenser lever by maneuvering it around the door mechanism assembly.17. Pull the pin from the door mechanism assembly and remove the spring and mechanism assembly.18. Reassemble in reverse order.Need Help let me know, Thanks
Sea Breeze
7/2/2012 8:00:00 PM •
Jenn-Air...
•
Answered
on Jul 02, 2012
Water does not flow
first you should take the water feed off, clear all water out of tube going to ice maker.remoe ice maker and check the wiring and all looks good.hook water up,turn water on just enough to see you have waterflow yo ice maker.might need a towel or two in the freezer.replace icemaker,make sure bar on ice maker is down,turn water on full,give it 12hrs to make ice. good water flow-no ice--replace ice maker.
6/2/2012 2:18:38 AM •
Jenn-Air...
•
Answered
on Jun 02, 2012
Refrigerator not cooling model jcd2389ges
The first thing you want to do is open the freezer and see if the fan inside there is running. The reason is the freezer cools the refrigerator side by circulating air from the freezer. If the fan is running then your problem is one or more parts of the defrost system is malfunctioned and in return your problem arises. There are three parts to the system, the defrost timer or in some cases control board, defrost thermostat also known as a bi-metal, and the defrost heater. The defrost system is set up to operate as so. The defrost timer or control board will turn the machine off, in some cases every 8 hours, some 12. During this time period the defrost heaters, located behind the freezer wall and rest underneath the evaporator, yet wires to them run up the side of it, are energized and emit heat that raises upward to melt the ice that has formed on the evaporator coils. The bi-metal or defrost thermostat is at the top of the evaporator. When the heat from the heater starts to reach the bi-metal, it breaks the circuit turning the heater off. The whole purpose of this is because the freezer cool the refridgerator side by drawing air across the coils and blowing to the other side via the evap fan motor. In my opinion, if you change one part of the defrost system change them all because usually when one part fails another will follow, so save yourself the time and the food loss, the cost difference is minute. If you need further help, I’m available over the phone at
https://www.6ya.com/expert/jason_4570d45317834dd3
5/29/2012 2:40:51 AM •
Jenn-Air...
•
Answered
on May 29, 2012
Not finding what you are looking for?