Induction is electronics, not cooking
Half of the “broken induction cooktop” calls we take are not broken cooktops. They are non-ferrous pans that the cooktop has correctly refused to heat, dirty pan-detection sensors, or a glass surface that needs a cleaning with the manufacturer-specified cerium oxide cleaner rather than a Magic Eraser. When we arrive, we test with a known-good ferrous pan first, then escalate to electronics if there’s a real fault.
When there is a real fault, it’s almost always a generator board — the electronics module that drives a specific set of coils. Thermador Freedom cooktops have five separate generator boards (one per coil row); Miele KM 77 has two. We isolate to the failed module, replace that module, and avoid the trap some shops fall into of quoting a whole-cooktop replacement for a single-module failure.
Microwaves, speed ovens, and drawer units
Microwaves split into three service categories, and we do all three:
- Countertop — honestly, we rarely recommend repair. A new mid-grade microwave is $150–$300. Unless it’s a Breville or similar premium countertop, we’ll tell you to replace.
- Built-in microwaves & speed ovens — Miele combi-micros, Wolf M-series, Thermador Masterpiece. These are $2,000–$4,000 appliances worth serving for 10–15 years. Magnetron, high-voltage diode, door-switch, and turntable-drive failures are routine repairs.
- Drawer microwaves — Sharp KB, Viking VMOD, Bosch. The drive mechanism that opens and closes the drawer is the #1 failure point. Individual parts are available and the repairs finish in a single visit.
Vent hoods: the forgotten appliance
No one thinks about a vent hood until it starts making a grinding noise at 11pm during a dinner party. We service vent-hood blowers, motors, speed controls, and touch-panel boards for the common Tarzana brands — Best, Broan, Vent-A-Hood, Zephyr, plus the integrated Wolf and Miele hoods. If the roof-mounted exhaust fan is the issue, we’ll climb up and diagnose; we just won’t touch the ducting itself.