Kenmore W10122502 & 2198597 Replacement Ice Maker for Sears Refrigerators - Compatible with Various Models, Perfect for Home Kitchen and Office Use
$71.79 $130.54-45%
Free shipping on all orders over $50
7-15 days international
29 people viewing this product right now!
30-day free returns
Secure checkout
72814943
Guranteed safe checkout
DESCRIPTION
Genuine OEM Kenmore Ice Maker Ice Maker W10122502 & 2198597 Sears RefrigeratorsMake WhirlpoolGENERAL INFORMATIONReplaces the following part numbers:Part Number 2198597 replaces W10122502, 626663, 1016069, 2198678, AH869316, EA869316, PS869316, W10190960.
REVIEWS
****** - Verified Buyer
4.5
My old ice maker I fixed multiple times by resoldering traces in the control unit after burn outs, etc...but this last problem I couldn't fix. I started overflowing water and wouldn't push out ice so I started looking around for a replacement. The costs I found ranged from dirt cheap to half the price of a new fridge and then this popped up on the feed. The price was higher than most but seemed like it was more OEM so I went with it.Ordered it, got the next day and assembled it with the necessary parts from the old model (plastic pieces - nothing major) and installed it. Boom - 45 minutes later ice starts collecting in the door unit! It appears to be a smaller design for the ice tray but all the original plastic parts fit fine. It also seems way quieter when running - but maybe that's my imagination.I did let it run through a couple of ice productions to clear out packaging dust, etc, that I wasn't able to clean out after installing. But after that we have ice!!!Excellent replacement part! Thanks!Update - The ice maker worked perfectly for nearly 2 weeks and then mysteriously shut off and would do nothing. Called in a service tech thinking that maybe the fridge was on the fritz. Turns out that the cable the contains the temp sensor and that plugs into the heavy motor housing - that end is temperamental on its connection to the enclosed circuit board. It relies completely on "touch" connection instead of having solid metal posts so there's little leeway. Apparently, while installing it and it going through a couple of cycles the cable retracted enough to break connection. This is a very cheap way to build things and sort of disappointing but at least I know now that if it stops making ice that maybe all I need to do is reseat the cable into the housing and that should restore operation. Great Sears tech to catch the issue and avoid an unnecessary return.