GTG2 Refrigerator - Overview
Models starting with GTG2
Click on the best match to narrow your results.
- GTG21B2L (P1193002W L) Amana Refrigerator
- GTG21B2L (P1193003W L) Amana Refrigerator
- GTG21B2L (P1193004W L) Amana Refrigerator
- GTG21B2L (P1193001W L) Amana Refrigerator
- GTG21B2L-P1193001WL Amana Refrigerator (TOP MOUNT REFRIGERATOR)
- GTG21B2L-P1193002WL Amana Refrigerator (TOP MOUNT REFRIGERATOR)
- GTG21B2L-P1193003WL Amana Refrigerator (TOP-MOUNT REFRIGERATOR)
- GTG21B2L-P1193004WL Amana Refrigerator (TOP-MOUNT REFRIGERATOR)
- GTG21B2W (P1193004W W) Amana Refrigerator
- GTG21B2W (P1193001W W) Amana Refrigerator
- GTG21B2W (P1193002W W) Amana Refrigerator
- GTG21B2W (P1193003W W) Amana Refrigerator
- GTG21B2W-P1193001WW Amana Refrigerator (TOP MOUNT REFRIGERATOR)
- GTG21B2W-P1193002WW Amana Refrigerator (TOP MOUNT REFRIGERATOR)
- GTG21B2W-P1193003WW Amana Refrigerator (TOP-MOUNT REFRIGERATOR)
- GTG21B2W-P1193004WW Amana Refrigerator (TOP-MOUNT REFRIGERATOR)
- GTG22FBMARWW General Electric Refrigerator
- GTG22FBSARWW General Electric Refrigerator
- GTG22IBMARWW General Electric Refrigerator
- GTG22IBSARWW General Electric Refrigerator
- GTG22JBMARWW General Electric Refrigerator
- GTG22JBSARWW General Electric Refrigerator
- GTG25DBMARWW General Electric Refrigerator
- GTG25DBSARWW General Electric Refrigerator
Keep searches simple, eg. "belt" or "pump".

Refrigerator Light Bulb (40w)
PartSelect #: PS884734
Manufacturer #: 8009
This an authentic OEM 40-Watt replacement light bulb, used in a number of household appliances. It is specially designed to withstand extreme temperatures, which is why these replacement bulbs are mos...
$17.80
In Stock

Refrigerator Temperature Sensor
PartSelect #: PS304103
Manufacturer #: WR55X10025
This sensor (Temperature Sensor, Thermistor, Refrigerator Temperature Sensor) sends the temperature reading of the compartment to the control board. If you notice your refrigerator is too warm, too co...
$28.95
In Stock

Refrigerator Defrost Thermostat
PartSelect #: PS1017716
Manufacturer #: WR50X10068
This defrost termination thermostat (Defrost Limiter Thermostat, High Limit Thermostat, Refrigerator Defrost Bi-Metal Thermostat) acts as a safety device to stop the evaporator coil from overheating, ...
$32.95
In Stock

Refrigerator Fan Grommet
PartSelect #: PS963756
Manufacturer #: WR02X12008
If you notice that your refrigerator or freezer is noisy or too warm, you may need to replace the evaporator fan grommet. This part is red in color, and is about 1 inch in diameter. The evaporator fan...
$12.95
In Stock

Refrigerator Door Switch
PartSelect #: PS12728638
Manufacturer #: W11384469
Door switch turns the light off when you close the door.
$29.37
In Stock

Refrigerator Capacitor
PartSelect #: PS11757023
Manufacturer #: WPW10662129
This capacitor (Refrigerator and Freezer Compressor Run Capacitor, Run Capacitor) provides the voltage or energy current required to start the compressor and keep it running. It allows the compressor ...
$42.95
In Stock

Refrigerator Condenser Fan Motor Kit
PartSelect #: PS395284
Manufacturer #: 833697
This condenser fan motor kit is designed for use with refrigerators. This fan draws air through the condenser coils and over the compressor. It does this with the goal of cooling the warm refrigerant ...
$62.32
In Stock

Refrigerator Evaporator Fan Motor
PartSelect #: PS1019114
Manufacturer #: WR60X10185
This evaporator fan motor circulates air to the fresh food compartments for efficient cooling. It powers the evaporator fan that draws air from the refrigerator and circulates it over the evaporator c...
$78.35
In Stock

Refrigerator Ring
PartSelect #: PS1015726
Manufacturer #: WR02X12149
This compression ring is meant to hold the evaporator fan motor in place in the freezer compartment of your refrigerator. This is is a genuine OEM part. The tools needed to complete this repair are a ...
$13.95
In Stock

Refrigerator Screw
PartSelect #: PS12349731
Manufacturer #: W11233072
This is a multi-use and multi-appliance screw. It can be used on a microwave, refrigerator, range/oven, air conditioner, dehumidifier, washer, or dryer. The measurements of this screw are 8 x 1/2 inch...
$20.95
In Stock

Dryer Screw
PartSelect #: PS11746840
Manufacturer #: WP90767
This screw is sold individually.
$7.95
In Stock
Common Symptoms of models starting with GTG2
[Viewing 24 of 24]Fridge too warm
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Freezer section too warm
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Noisy
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Light not working
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Freezer not defrosting
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Will Not Start
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Fridge and Freezer are too warm
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Fridge too cold
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Too warm
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Fridge runs too long
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Frost buildup
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Freezer too cold
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Clicking sound
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Door Sweating
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Leaking
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Door won’t open or close
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Ice maker not making ice
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Little to no heat when baking
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Doesn’t stop running
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Won’t start
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Door latch failure
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Element will not heat
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Not dispensing water
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Too cold
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Keep searches simple. Use keywords, e.g. "leaking", "pump", "broken" or "fit".
My refrigerator stopped cooling and the freezer section stopped freezing
I knew the chances of all the freon leaking out was unlikely so I looked at the wiring to the compressor and there was a capacitor and a starter/overload so i figured I would start there. I went on line and found the parts at this site and they were less than the minimum service call charge for a service tech so I figured what the heck le
... Read more
t's give her a shot so I did give it a shot. I ordered the parts and they were there in less time than a service tech could come out and i installed the parts and guess what for 90.00 in parts and 15 minutes in time I repaired my refrigerator. Thanks guys, It took less time to order the parts than it did to make the repair so thanks, your website rocks and is very well designed so my hat is off to you guys!
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Parts Used:
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garth from forest lake, MN
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Difficulty Level:Really Easy
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Total Repair Time:15 - 30 mins
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Tools:Nutdriver, Screw drivers
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Freezer wouldn't maintain temperature ... got warm.
The freezer in my side-by-side kept warming up -- often 20 degrees or more, which of course caused the fresh food side to warm up also. I do a lot of jump-in-with-both-feet home repairs, but never on a large appliance. Not having an ohmmeter, which cost about $100 for a reliable one, I took the symptoms to the internet. Countless self-hel
... Read more
p sites and U-Tube videos later, I was positive it was one of two possible problems, either the defrost thermostat was broken and the defroster wasn't coming out of its cycle or the temperature sensor wasn't reading the correct temp and thus kicking in the fan motor when needed. Fortunately I found both parts easily on PartSelect.com and the total cost for both, including shipping, was $30, less than 1/3 of the cost of an ohmmeter. Not knowing for sure which part it was that was bad, I ordered both, figuring, since I had to pull out the panel anyway, I might just as well replace them both ... the price was right. (In retrospect I should have order 4 Temperature Sensors as my fridge has two in both the freezer side and the Fresh Food side. Any one of them being bad could have caused the same problem. Fortunately, I was lucky because it was either ONLY the Defrost Thermostat or I just happened to pick the right Sensor, but the repair worked.)
The repair was easy: Unplug the power. A Nut Driver removed the four screws holding on the panel in the back of the freezer. A screw driver removes the one screw holding the lamp cover in place. Remove the light bulbs, pull off the panel and right above the freezer coils you'll see both parts -- plain as day. (If your coils are clogged with ice, you will probably need de-ice first.) Cut the wires to both parts as close to the parts as you can to leave as much wire exposed as possible. Strip the ends of all four wires about 1/2 inch and also on the new parts. Match up the wires in the fridge to the wires on the parts and twist the ends together (Note: both wires on the Sensor are white so they match up either way, but the two wire on the thermostat will need to match up orange to orange and pink to pink.) I used silicone filled wire nuts, which you can buy at any hardware store or use your own wing nuts and fill them with silicone or shoe goo which works just as well ... anything to keep the moisture out and prevent the wires ends from corroding. Tuck the wires up and replace the panel, light bulbs and light cover That's it. Very easy. By far the hardest part was wedging my wide body into the narrow freezer compartment. Some one-handed work added a little extra time to the project.
In my case the freezer fan didn't kick in for about twenty minutes after I plugged it back in, but I assume that it either begins in the defrost mode or it takes that long for it to reset itself ... either way the repair worked great.
The repair was easy: Unplug the power. A Nut Driver removed the four screws holding on the panel in the back of the freezer. A screw driver removes the one screw holding the lamp cover in place. Remove the light bulbs, pull off the panel and right above the freezer coils you'll see both parts -- plain as day. (If your coils are clogged with ice, you will probably need de-ice first.) Cut the wires to both parts as close to the parts as you can to leave as much wire exposed as possible. Strip the ends of all four wires about 1/2 inch and also on the new parts. Match up the wires in the fridge to the wires on the parts and twist the ends together (Note: both wires on the Sensor are white so they match up either way, but the two wire on the thermostat will need to match up orange to orange and pink to pink.) I used silicone filled wire nuts, which you can buy at any hardware store or use your own wing nuts and fill them with silicone or shoe goo which works just as well ... anything to keep the moisture out and prevent the wires ends from corroding. Tuck the wires up and replace the panel, light bulbs and light cover That's it. Very easy. By far the hardest part was wedging my wide body into the narrow freezer compartment. Some one-handed work added a little extra time to the project.
In my case the freezer fan didn't kick in for about twenty minutes after I plugged it back in, but I assume that it either begins in the defrost mode or it takes that long for it to reset itself ... either way the repair worked great.
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Parts Used:
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Mike from Scottsdale, AZ
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Difficulty Level:Easy
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Total Repair Time:15 - 30 mins
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Tools:Nutdriver, Screw drivers
296 of 350 people
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my refigerator was warm but the freezer was cold and working correcttly
I went to a GE repair center to explain my problem, the service center reccomended that I have a techinician come out o look at it. $75.00 for the visit and what ever labor and materials wuld cost.
I went on line to see if there were others having this same problem and found that there were many with the same problem.
... Read more />After reading some of the ways that people found out what was wrong ...it became a matter of three components, the timer, heater or thermostat.
I tried the most common component and the less expensive one first , the thermostat switch I installed it very easily snipping two wires and attaching the news using wire nuts I used the diagram on this website to pinpoint the component and there has not been a problem since.
I went on line to see if there were others having this same problem and found that there were many with the same problem.
... Read more />After reading some of the ways that people found out what was wrong ...it became a matter of three components, the timer, heater or thermostat.
I tried the most common component and the less expensive one first , the thermostat switch I installed it very easily snipping two wires and attaching the news using wire nuts I used the diagram on this website to pinpoint the component and there has not been a problem since.
Read less
Parts Used:
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michele from North Smithfield, RI
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Difficulty Level:Really Easy
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Total Repair Time:15 - 30 mins
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Tools:Pliers
296 of 380 people
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