Professional Appliance Repair Service

Same-Day Oven/Stove Repair in The Colony & Surrounding Cities

Certified technicians, all major brands, professional service

Same-Day Service
20+ Years Experience
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(888) 771-3235
4.8(3,400+ reviews)

Real Repairs by Our Technicians

Common Oven/Stove Problems

What Our Customers Say

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Jennifer Rodriguez
2 weeks ago

Our Samsung fridge stopped cooling overnight. Called Max Appliance and they sent someone out same day. The technician was professional, explained everything clearly, and had us back up and running in under 2 hours. Pricing was fair and transparent. Highly recommend!

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Michael Thompson
1 month ago

Washer was making a horrible noise. The tech arrived on time, diagnosed the issue quickly (worn bearing), and completed the repair efficiently. Very knowledgeable and reasonably priced. Will definitely use them again.

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Sarah Martinez
1 month ago

Had an issue with our GE dishwasher not draining. Max Appliance came out the next day, fixed it within an hour, and cleaned up everything. The technician was courteous and explained what caused the problem. Great service!

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David Chen
2 months ago

Our LG dryer stopped heating. Called Max Appliance and they were able to fit us in the same day. The repair was done professionally and the price was exactly what they quoted over the phone. Very satisfied with the service.

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Amanda Williams
2 months ago

Excellent service! Our Whirlpool refrigerator was leaking water. The technician arrived within the scheduled window, quickly identified the problem, and had the parts needed in his truck. Fixed it on the spot. Very pleased!

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Robert Johnson
3 months ago

Called them for our Maytag washer that wouldn't spin. They came out same day, tech was friendly and professional. Fixed the issue and gave us maintenance tips to prevent future problems. Fair pricing too. Would recommend!

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Lisa Anderson
4 months ago

Our KitchenAid oven stopped working right before Thanksgiving. Max Appliance saved the day! Same-day service, professional technician, and reasonable rates. We were so relieved. Thank you!

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James Parker
6 months ago

Had them fix our dishwasher last year and they did such a great job we called them again for our fridge. Always reliable, professional, and fair pricing. They're our go-to for all appliance repairs now.

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Patricia White
7 months ago

Very responsive and professional. Our freezer stopped working and they came out within hours. The technician was knowledgeable and explained everything clearly. Repair was done quickly and hasn't had any issues since.

Subdivisions off Main Street through the 75056 zip filled up fast between 2000 and 2010 — and those builders were putting in real kitchens. KitchenAid wall ovens, Bosch slide-in ranges, the occasional Samsung built-in suite ended up as standard fare in the mid-to-upper-price builds. Those appliances are 15-20 years deep now. Bake elements burn out. Temperature sensors drift. The same oven that ran Thanksgiving without a complaint for a decade suddenly can't hold 350° on a Tuesday night. It's not bad luck. It's math. A bake element that cycles on and off twice per hour for 15 years has logged somewhere around 26,000 thermal cycles. The nichrome wire fatigues. Ceramic insulators crack. The RTD sensor's resistance curve shifts outside the range the control board expects. These aren't design flaws — they're normal wear on components that were never spec'd for indefinite service life. Colony homes built between 2003 and 2012 are hitting exactly that window right now, and the call volume we see out of 75056 reflects it directly. Knowing the neighborhood means arriving with the right parts. A KitchenAid KOSE500ESS bake element isn't interchangeable with what fits a Thermador MED302JS. Getting that detail wrong costs everyone a second visit. Eleven years working DFW suburbs means we've mapped which builds got which appliance suites — and stocked the truck accordingly.

The Colony's home inventory is mostly 1998-2015 tract construction, clustered in neighborhoods like Stewart Creek Estates and The Trails near Lewisville Lake. The 75056 zip leans KitchenAid and LG as the default kitchen suite — often installed as upgrades in builds that already carried higher specs. Double wall oven cutouts in those homes are usually tight, which complicates bake element and control board access. Texas summers don't help either — sustained 100°F ambient temps in attached garages stress convection fan motors harder than manufacturers design for. The Tribute neighborhood along the lake shoreline runs a different profile entirely. Those builds skew Thermador and Sub-Zero — higher-end buyers who spec'd premium appliances in the 2010-2018 window. Thermador steam-assist ovens have their own failure pattern: the steam generator's scale buildup from North Texas hard water chokes the steam injection port and triggers E-series fault codes well before the heating element itself goes. Parts availability for those units is narrower, which is why carrying the right inventory for 75056 specifically matters. North Texas water hardness runs 15-20 grains per gallon in most of Denton County — solidly in the "very hard" classification. It shows up in oven repair in ways homeowners don't expect. Steam-assist features scale up fast. The Colony homeowners running Thermador steam-clean cycles who notice declining steam output after two or three years are dealing with mineral scale at the injection port, not a failing generator — though a neglected scale issue will eventually thermally stress the heating element surrounding it. Catching it early costs a fraction of a full steam generator replacement. Convection fan failures show up disproportionately in Colony kitchens for a geographic reason. This area sits in one of the hotter DFW micro-zones, and west-facing kitchens on cul-de-sacs absorb serious afternoon solar load through 2000s-era single-pane windows that are still in a lot of these homes. An oven working in a 90°F kitchen in July is running its convection motor outside design spec. Grease accumulates faster on the fan blade, motor bearings wear sooner, and the grinding noise starts before the motor seizes entirely. A KitchenAid KEMS308SSS convection fan motor replacement is a straightforward repair — but only if the tech arrives with that motor on the truck. Older sections of The Colony closer to SH-121 and Plano Parkway include some late-1990s builds where original appliances have already been swapped once. Those replacement installs sometimes used contractor-grade units — GE or Frigidaire ranges dropped in where a KitchenAid used to live. Cutout dimensions don't always match cleanly. Control boards from that era use ERC (electronic range control) modules that are increasingly scarce new, pushing owners toward refurbished boards with inconsistent reliability. That's a different repair category than a Thermador in Tribute, and the diagnostic approach differs accordingly.

Common Oven/Stove Issues in The Colony

Temperature Drift in KitchenAid Wall Ovens — RTD Sensor Failures

KitchenAid electric wall ovens from the mid-2000s commonly develop a failing RTD temperature sensor that causes the cavity to run 30-50°F low without throwing a visible error code. The bake element glows, the display reads correctly, but your food comes out underdone. Swapping the sensor is a 45-minute fix and costs a fraction of a service call on a newer unit. Most Colony homes on these builds are right in the failure window now. If you're seeing a persistent F3 or F8 code alongside uneven baking, that sensor is almost always the starting point. The failure mode is gradual. A drifting RTD sensor doesn't quit all at once — it degrades over months. Early on, the oven just runs cold and the calibration offset buried in the control board menu partially compensates. Then the sensor's resistance curve shifts enough that calibration can't cover the gap anymore, and F3 errors start appearing intermittently. By the time it's throwing F3 consistently, the sensor has typically been degrading for six months or more. KitchenAid KOSE500 and KOCE500 series double wall ovens in 75056 are the most frequent offenders in our DFW call logs. The sensor itself is a $40-60 part. Labor to access it through a tight double wall oven cutout brings the job to around $160-200 total — still a fraction of replacement cost on a unit that's otherwise mechanically sound.

Bosch Gas Range Broiler Won't Ignite — Weakened Igniter Draw

Bosch gas ranges see broiler igniter failures more than the brand's reputation suggests. The igniter weakens gradually, eventually drawing insufficient microamps to open the gas valve — so the burner clicks continuously but never lights. A draw test with a clamp meter separates the two components — igniter or valve, one gets replaced, not both. Most Colony service calls on Bosch broilers resolve with an igniter swap, no valve replacement needed. Bosch uses a round igniter design on most of their slide-in gas ranges — the HGI8054UC and HEI8054U are the models appearing most frequently in The Colony's newer builds. A healthy igniter draws 3.2 to 3.6 amps at 120V. Below 2.5 amps, the gas valve solenoid won't actuate. The igniter still glows — it just doesn't reach temperature fast enough to satisfy the valve's safety threshold. Homeowners who replace the igniter themselves and find the broiler still won't light have usually skipped the draw test and replaced a part that tested fine. If the igniter draws correctly and the valve still won't open, the solenoid itself is the problem. Bosch valve solenoids are more expensive and occasionally backordered. Knowing which component to test first prevents a wasted return trip. Techs covering the 75056 area carry both parts on Colony calls because the 25-minute drive from DFW dispatch doesn't justify coming back for a single component.

Samsung Self-Clean Cycle Locks the Door and Won't Release

Samsung slide-in ranges use a door latch motor driven by the main control board, and when either faults mid-cycle, the door stays locked. Cutting power and waiting 30 minutes clears some cases. When it doesn't, you're looking at a latch motor or control board replacement. The control board in the NE59 and NX58 series that landed in Colony builds between 2010 and 2015 is a known weak point — the relay that drives the latch motor degrades from repeated high-heat cycles. Call us at (832) 366-1414 — we stock latch assemblies for the Samsung models common in The Colony's 2008-2015 builds and can usually get there same-day. The Samsung NX58H9500WS and NX58M9420SS are the two models that come up most in 75056. Both use the same door latch assembly (part DG94-00520A on the H-series, similar revision on the M-series). When the main control board relay fails mid-self-clean, it can lock the door and disable the display simultaneously — looks like a complete unit failure. It usually isn't. Power cycling at the breaker for 15 minutes sometimes resets the relay state long enough to release the latch. If that doesn't clear it, don't force the door. The latch assembly mounts to the inner door frame, and forcing it bends the bracket, turning a $120 latch replacement into a $300 door repair. Techs running Colony calls carry the DG94-series latch and the control board for both NX58 variants. Same-day service available at (832) 366-1414.

Thermador Wall Oven E030 and E031 Faults — Scale at the Steam Injector

Thermador steam-assist wall ovens are the premium spec in Tribute and the lakeside Colony builds, and they develop a failure pattern that rarely gets covered outside brand-specific service channels. The steam generator accumulates mineral scale from North Texas hard water — Denton County averages around 17 grains per gallon, well into the "very hard" range by USGS classification. That scale slowly chokes the steam injection port. The generator overheats trying to push water through a restricted orifice, the thermal cutoff trips, and the oven throws an E030 or E031 fault code. Steam function goes offline. The rest of the oven still works. Homeowners who see E030 on a Thermador MED302 or MEDMCW wall oven typically assume the steam generator has failed outright. Sometimes it has. More often, descaling the injection port and resetting the thermal cutoff restores the unit completely. Full steam generator replacement on Thermador runs $600-900 in parts alone. Descaling and cutoff reset runs a fraction of that. The distinction matters significantly. If the generator has been thermally cycled to the point of coil failure, descaling won't save it — but catching the scale problem before the cutoff trips repeatedly preserves the generator entirely. Thermador recommends descaling every 200 steam cycles in hard water areas; most Colony homeowners in 75056 have never performed a single descale. Call (832) 366-1414 before assuming the generator needs replacement — a diagnostic visit clarifies it either way.

Frequently Asked Questions

How fast can you get to The Colony for oven repair?

Techs run the SH-121 corridor daily. The Colony is typically 20-30 minutes from our nearest dispatch point in the DFW metro. Call (832) 366-1414 before noon and we can usually have someone out the same afternoon. Evening slots also available for working households.

Do you repair KitchenAid and Bosch ovens in The Colony?

Both, regularly. KitchenAid wall ovens and Bosch gas ranges are two of the most common calls we get in 75056. LG and Samsung built-ins too. Bake elements, control boards, RTD temperature sensors, door latch assemblies — we carry the parts that actually fail on these models rather than ordering on arrival. Thermador and Sub-Zero work in Tribute and the lakeside builds is a regular part of the call rotation as well. Those premium units require brand-specific parts and familiarity with the fault code architecture — not a tech reverse-engineering it from a generic repair manual on your kitchen floor.

What does oven repair cost in The Colony and how does the process work?

The diagnostic fee covers the visit and the assessment — it applies toward repair if you move forward. A bake element replacement typically runs $160-$240 parts and labor. Control board swaps run higher, usually $280-$380. Thermador and Sub-Zero work sits on the higher end of that range given parts lead times and unit complexity. Everything gets quoted before we touch anything. Same-day and emergency appointments available — schedule at (832) 366-1414.

My oven display is on but there's no heat — what does that mean?

Almost always a failed bake element. The control board and display circuit are independent from the heating element — so a burned-out element kills the heat while the display keeps running normally. Pull the oven rack out and look directly at the element. A visible crack, blister, or burn mark confirms it. No visible damage doesn't rule it out — internal wire failures don't show externally. A resistance test across the element terminals gives a definitive answer. On KitchenAid and LG wall ovens in The Colony's 75056 builds, bake element replacement is typically a same-day repair. Call (832) 366-1414 and describe the symptom — we'll tell you on the phone what part is most likely before we even schedule.

Is it worth repairing a 15-year-old oven in The Colony or should I replace it?

Depends on the brand and the specific failure. A KitchenAid or Bosch wall oven from 2008-2010 with a failed bake element or drifting RTD sensor is almost always worth fixing. Those units were built for 20+ years of service — paying $200 for an element replacement on a $1,800 oven makes straightforward financial sense. Control board failure shifts the math. A board replacement at $350-400 on a unit that's already 17 years old and showing other wear is a harder call. For Thermador and Sub-Zero in that age range, repair usually still wins because a comparable replacement runs $3,000-6,000. The diagnostic visit identifies exactly what failed and gives you a repair quote. From there you decide — no pressure from our end either way.

Need Oven/Stove Repair in The Colony?

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(888) 771-3235
(888) 771-3235
The Colony Oven/Stove Repair & Surrounding Cities | Same-Day Service | Max Appliance Service