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On plug-in coil models, the burner connects directly into a socket. If it is not seated correctly, power may not reach the coil. Symptoms include one burner staying completely cold, feeling loose, or working only when moved slightly — the burner may sit unevenly, wobble, or look slightly pulled out from the socket. This is usually safe for homeowners to check after the stove is off, cool, and unplugged or powered off at the breaker.
The coil or radiant element can burn out over time from normal use, spills, overheating, or age. One burner may not heat at all, heat only partially, or show visible cracks, blisters, or burn marks — the burner may look damaged, warped, or darker in one area. Plug-in coil replacement is usually homeowner-safe if the correct part is used, but smooth-top radiant elements should be serviced by a technician.
The receptacle is the socket where the coil plugs in. If it becomes burned, loose, or corroded, the burner may not receive power. A telltale sign is when a known good burner still does not heat in that same spot. Look for scorch marks, melted plastic, loose contact points, or a burning smell near the burner socket. Visual inspection is safe with the power off, but replacing the receptacle is technician territory.
The infinite switch is the control behind the burner knob that sends power to the element. If it fails, the burner may not turn on, may heat only on high, or may jump from cold to very hot with no control in between — the knob turns normally, but the burner does not respond correctly. This is not a safe DIY repair; it requires opening the control panel and testing electrical components.
Electric ranges usually need a proper 240-volt supply. If one side of the breaker trips or the outlet connection is poor, parts of the stove may work while the burners do not heat correctly. The display may still work, but heating functions may fail across multiple burners. Homeowners can check the breaker, but anything involving the outlet, cord, wiring, or terminal block should be handled by a technician or electrician.
Turn the burner off and let it cool completely. Never touch a burner or socket while it is hot.
Turn off power before touching anything. Unplug the stove if accessible, or switch off the range breaker.
Check if other burners work. If only one burner is cold, the problem is likely the coil, socket, or switch for that burner. If all burners are cold, suspect a power supply issue.
Inspect the burner coil. Look for cracks, blisters, burned spots, warping, or signs that the coil is not seated correctly.
Reseat the burner coil. On coil-top models, gently remove the coil and push it back into the socket firmly and evenly.
Swap with a same-size working burner. If the suspect coil works in another socket, the coil is good. If a known good coil does not work in the original socket, the issue is likely the receptacle or switch.
Stop if you see burn marks or smell burning plastic. Do not continue using that burner. Electrical damage can get worse quickly.
This usually points to a bad coil, loose coil connection, damaged receptacle, or failed infinite switch. Start with the simple checks: reseat the coil and swap it with another burner of the same size. If the problem stays with the burner, the coil is likely bad. If the problem stays with the socket, it needs professional diagnosis.
If all surface burners are cold, the stove may not be getting proper power. A range can sometimes have partial power, where the clock or lights work but the heating elements do not. Check the breaker first. If the breaker looks normal and the problem continues, stop and call a technician or electrician.
This usually means the infinite switch is stuck or failing. The burner is receiving power, but the control is not regulating it correctly. Do not keep using the burner this way because it can overheat cookware and create a safety risk.
Intermittent heating often points to a loose connection, worn socket, or failing switch. If moving the burner makes it heat or stop heating, the receptacle may be loose or damaged. Stop using that burner until it is checked.
A breaker that trips when the burner is turned on can mean a shorted element, damaged receptacle, wiring problem, or issue with the range circuit. Do not keep resetting the breaker. Turn the stove off and schedule service.
A homeowner can safely check the breaker, inspect the coil, reseat the coil, and swap plug-in burners. Anything behind the cooktop, inside the control panel, or involving wiring should be left to a professional.
