Kitchenaid Serial Number Search

KitchenAid Oven/Range/Stove Fault Codes (including 2 and 4 digit codes) Note: Depending upon the brand of appliance, there can be many different names for the 'clock' component. Electronic Range Control, ERC, Electronic Oven Control, EOC, control board, and clock all refer to the same part. 4 Digit Failure Codes. Prices for online orders only. Price and availability subject to change - customer will be notified if any changes are necessary. Please respond to this email address kitchenaidreceiptsusa@kitchenaid.com, with your name, user ID#243925646 used for the review, phone number, street address, zip code, model & serial number, and date of purchase on the appliance.

When it comes to diagnosis issues or fixing up your KitchenAid Stand Mixer it can be a big help to have the model and serial number available.

Kitchenaid Serial Number Search

On all KitchenAid products model and serial numbers are usually stored on a silver label for major appliances and for the portable ones they store this information on a white label.

So where do you find this label on your KitchenAid Mixer?

Well, all you need to do is follow these simple steps.

How To Find Kitchenaid Model Number

How To Get The Model And Serial Number Off A KitchenAid Mixer

Kitchenaid Serial Number Search Online

If you want to get the model and serial number off of your KitchenAid Mixer just follow theses simple steps:

  1. Grab a towel or have some sort of soft surface to lay your mixer on.
  2. Turn your mixer on its side that you can see under the base
  3. The model and serial number sticker can be found while looking under the base

Statute of Repose for Product Liability Lawsuits

I started doing forensic engineering work in the late 1990's. If I was looking at an appliance, on an insurance claim, the first question the adjuster had, was how old was the appliance. The insurance adjuster wanted to make sure that the appliance manufactured date was not past the 'Statue of Repose'. A Statute of Repose is similar to a Statute of Limitation. The appliance manufactures have lobbied state legislatures to pass laws that limit their responsibility for subrogation damages based on the age of an appliance. The manufacturer's argument is that if a product has lasted for ten years, then it is not defective in design, manufacturing or materials. Difference states have difference time limits, but ten years is the average. On the surface this sounds reasonable, but design defects often go undetected for a number of years. For example, in the 2014, there was class action lawsuit settlement against Electrolux for design defects in clothes dryers manufactured from 2002 through 2011. All states do not have Statue of Repose Laws. Two of states I do work in Mississippi and Louisiana do not have Product Liability Statute of Repose Laws, and the law passed by the Alabama Legislature has been found unconstitutional. The Statute of Repose for all 50 states are listed in the referenced tables: