By swat247
I’ve already re-learned both sensors. Any ideas?
Source: DoItYourself.com
By swat247
I’ve already re-learned both sensors. Any ideas?
Source: DoItYourself.com
By SELuc
Source: DoItYourself.com
By Lrd_Hawk
i ordered the board but they for some reason could not get one. i called another suppler and had a board the next day. now after 2 days the unit is still not freezing , the fridge side seams to be ok but just barley.
the evaporator fan turns off when i open the door and turns on when i close the doors if memory servers me.
so i now have a new board in the unit but same problem. i could not find any service documents or electrical diagrams to aid me in troubleshooting.
any advice would be very helpful. the unit was built Sept. 2010
Source: DoItYourself.com
Filed under: Company News, General Electric, Earnings, Stocks, Investing
By JONATHAN FAHEY
NEW YORK — General Electric posted a slight gain in net income in the second quarter and said its U.S. operations are picking up steam.
General Electric Co. (GE) said Friday that it earned $3.13 billion, up from $3.11 billion a year earlier. On a per-share basis, the company earned 30 cents, up from 29 cents. Revenue fell 4 percent, to $35.12 billion from $36.5 billion.
Adjusted to reflect earnings from continuing operations, GE earned 36 cents a share. That’s 2 cents less than adjusted earnings last year, but one cent better than analysts polled by FactSet had expected. GE shares rose 61 cents, or 2.6 percent, to $24.24 in trading before the market opened.
GE, based in Fairfield, Conn., has a broad view of the global economy because it sells a wide variety of industrial equipment and appliances around the world, including jet engines, medical diagnostic equipment, locomotives, washing machines, natural gas-fired turbines, and oil and gas drilling equipment.
CEO Jeff Immelt said orders in the U.S. showed “strong growth,” an improvement from recent quarters when he expressed caution about the U.S. market. Immelt said emerging markets remained strong and that Europe has stabilized, but remained weak.
The company’s orders for new business rose $7 billion last quarter to a record $223 billion. Immelt said he expects profits to grow in the second half of the year.
GE is in the midst of transforming itself in to a company more focused on industrial businesses. It’s been shedding media and other non-industrial divisions and shrinking its banking division. Infrastructure orders rose 4 percent and profit margins for industrial segments rose 0.5 percent. GE Capital earnings fell 9 percent.
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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance
By timmonsg
How I found this out originally was as a result of a call from my wife saying the refrigerator shutdown. It was 24 hours before I could respond only to unplug and replug the main power cord VOILA! Works fine. Again, anytime the light bulb touch ICON on the ice/water dipenser panel is touched, activating the light, the light works but immediately the fridge shuts down. The touch panel has a total of four (4) touchable icons which are: Water, Ice, Crusched, and Light.
When you touch and activate the other three (3) touch panel Icons, the indicator lights work depending on the one you touch which leaves me to believe that the touch panel board is good. When you place a glass in the dispenser area when in either of the three other modes (Water,Ice,Crusched) and activate the lever, the result is a half-speed condition of the internal fan but no ice auger activation. The difference is; the refrigerator tends to reset itself back to normal in just a few seconds after you release the dispenser lever to the normal position. What we have been doing since this problem is remove the water dispenser light bulb so as to avoid the worstcase condition being; the refrigerator not returning to a powered-up condition.
The ice maker does fine when it is used manually i.e. dispense ice by your bare hands from the ice container mounted under the icemaker. Periodically, the water dispenser will work as advertised, but the light comes on automatically and usually results in the powered down state as previously detailed.
Having said all this to hopefully have you advise me to replace the main board is what I suspicion. If not, then I will save the $159.00 dollar part cost and spend it on one of my vintage motorcycle projects. No seriously, I appreciate any and all help in this matter cause I certainly like a challenge.
In closing for now, I hope I give you enough information/symptoms to my dilema and look forward to any and all replies.
Source: DoItYourself.com
By Madmanjc
Source: DoItYourself.com
By tecster
Yesterday, I had him come in and replace the pressure switch from 30-50 to 40-60. I was washing some dishes this evening on dinner break and began to smell the smell again… I’m not sure what to do! I thought I had it all figured out, everything was grand and now I get this faint smell from the kitchen sink. I have yet to try and see if it smells in the shower or the bathroom – I will be showering when I get home.
Let me know what y’all think – thanks!
Rob
Source: DoItYourself.com
By sfo6jxd
Filed under: Earnings, Market News
One of the biggest IPOs this year could make a big splash today. Theme park operator SeaWorld was priced at the high end of expectations, $27 a share. That values the company at $2.5 dollars.
Two out of three ain’t bad: That’s the scorecard from the three tech giants that reported quarterly results late yesterday.
Microsoft’s (MSFT) profit rose by a better-than-expected 19 percent to more than $6. Sales of server software and Xbox video games were strong, but newly booked revenue from Windows was essentially flat.
Google’s (GOOG) net rose 16 percent, also topping expectations. Revenue growth in its core advertising business was also strong.
But IBM (IBM) came up short of Street expectations and revenue was hurt by sluggish demand from corporate tech customers. It the first time IBM has missed the target since 2005. Separately, Big Blue is in talks to sell its huge server business to China-based Lenovo.
General Electric’s (GE) net rose 16 percent, in line with expectations. Revenue was flat, but a bit stronger than expected. GE is often considered a bellwether for the broader economy.
Blackstone Group (BX) has withdrawn its offer for Dell (DELL) after discovering the computer maker’s business is deteriorating faster than previously thought. That leaves only investor Carl Icahn as a possible rival to the bid from a group led by company founder Michael Dell to take the company private.
It was seven months ago today that Apple (AAPL) shares hit their all-time high of $702; they closed yesterday at $392. That’s a drop of 44 percent.
And Netflix (NFLX) is hoping to build on the success of its “House of Card” series with a second original program. Today it begins streaming the entire first season of a gothic horror series, “Hemlock Grove.”
-Produced by Drew Trachtenberg
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From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/on/seaworld-IPO-stock-market-news/
By Reuters
Filed under: Media, General Electric, Earnings, Aerospace & Defense, Stocks
By Ernest Scheyder
General Electric reported a first-quarter profit in line with Wall Street‘s expectations on Friday, as the conglomerate sold more jet engines and shed its stake in NBC Universal.
The world’s biggest maker of jet engines and electric turbines said it earned $3.53 billion, or 34 cents a share, compared with $3.03 billion, or 29 cents a share, a year earlier.
Excluding one-time items, the company earned 35 cents a share, matching analyst expectations, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Revenue rose slightly to $35 billion, beating the $34.51 billion analysts had expected.
GE‘s order backlog — a closely watched indicator of future sales — rose to $216 billion from $210 billion in the fourth quarter of 2012.
General Electric Co. (GE) shares fell slightly to $22.65 in premarket trading.
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By Reuters
By Ernest Scheyder
General Electric reported a first-quarter profit in line with Wall Street‘s expectations on Friday, as the conglomerate sold more jet engines and shed its stake in NBC Universal.
The world’s biggest maker of jet engines and electric turbines said it earned $3.53 billion, or 34 cents a share, compared with $3.03 billion, or 29 cents a share, a year earlier.
Excluding one-time items, the company earned 35 cents a share, matching analyst expectations, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Revenue rose slightly to $35 billion, beating the $34.51 billion analysts had expected.
GE‘s order backlog — a closely watched indicator of future sales — rose to $216 billion from $210 billion in the fourth quarter of 2012.
General Electric Co. (GE) shares fell slightly to $22.65 in premarket trading.
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By markag
At lowes yeseterday, I noticed that the Homeline breakers are about half the price of the QO breakers. Also, it appears that Eaton may be a little more affordable for breakers and panels then the QO line. Is there a more affordable panel / breaker system that would be adequate for a garage sub panel. I don’t really know anything about GE or Siemens stuff.
I plan on having a 240v air compressor, oven, and then a handful of 120 v circuits for lighting, recepticals, etc.
What would you guys suggest? Should I stay away from any particular system?
From: http://www.doityourself.com/forum/electrical-c-d-c/493507-recommended-service-panel-brand.html
By skitexas
From: http://www.doityourself.com/forum/electrical-c-d-c/493180-ge-cook-top-trouble-shooting.html
By homerlp
Thanks.
By Dan Caplinger, The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
For those seeking the biggest, most stable stocks in the market, the Dow Jones Industrials includes the leaders of many different industries. But you’ll also find a wide range of companies that avoid specializing in particular areas, instead aggregating businesses from different industries in an attempt to create broadly diversified holding companies.
Conglomerates in the Dow are particularly interesting because they provide a window into what diversified businesses see as their best profit opportunities. Let’s look at how the Dow’s conglomerates have fared so far in 2013 and what their prospects are for the rest of the year and beyond.
Dow conglomerates total return price data by YCharts.
Conglomerate stocks have performed quite well recently, with all three of these companies having outpaced the Dow’s overall return. But a big part of the reason has to do with the pace at which many conglomerates are straying from their diversified histories to concentrate more on high-growth industries.
United Technologies has gone through the biggest transformation recently. Its massive $16.5 billion acquisition of Goodrich represented a big commitment from United Tech to look to the aerospace sector as its primary means of making profits. Since the takeover, United Tech has sold off non-core assets to satisfy regulators, raise cash to help pay down the debt it incurred in the buyout, and refocused its efforts toward a single industry. Yet it has still retained its Otis elevator business along with other industrially focused units, such as its Carrier HVAC division, that give the company some diversification.
For General Electric , the trend has been to de-emphasize its financial business in returning to its industrial roots. But that hasn’t stopped the company from moving in interesting new directions, broadening its energy focus to include both traditional fossil-fuel and renewable-energy infrastructure. Moreover, GE’s foray toward mining equipment will challenge some of the biggest companies in the business.
Finally, 3M is best known for its consumer products, but it makes a huge array of goods for industrial use. Its purchase of ceramics specialist Ceradyne expanded its business, with a particular emphasis on defense- and energy-related applications that the company offered 3M. With health care, safety and security, and electronics also within 3M’s portfolio of businesses, the company is looking now toward restarting its innovation engine in all of its focus areas.
Will conglomerates de-conglomerate?
Historically, conglomerates have gone through cycles of popularity, with periods of big mergers and diverse combinations eventually giving way to periods of corporate break-ups and spinoffs. Right now, we’re in an anti-conglomerate phase, but with merger activity picking up in some industries, it’ll be interesting to see if that trend reverses itself. Meanwhile, shareholders have to be happy with the results that the Dow’s conglomerates have produced lately.
GE is the ultimate conglomerate, but it’s making huge strategic bets in energy. If you’re a GE investor, you need to understand how these bets could
From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/14/how-the-dows-conglomerates-have-fared-in/
By Tyler Crowe and Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
On the surface, General Electric‘s announcement that it will buy Lufkin Industries just appears to be a manufacturing giant picking up an oilfield services manufacturing specialist. If you dig deeper, though, you find that this could be a big signal of what is to come in North American oil and gas production. Lufkin’s specialty is building artificial lift equipment for oil and gas wells, a service normally reserved for mature wells that need a little extra help bringing resources to the surface.
With so much drilling happening in the U.S. over the past few years, there may be a big boom for this type of particular equipment in the next couple of years. With this purchase, not only is GE locking up a larger market share in this particular industry, but the high price it paid, it shows how valuable this market could be. in this video, Fool.com contributor Tyler Crowe discusses how the deal went down, and he also gives some possible investment ideas that follow this particular trend.
For GE, the recent financial crisis struck a blow, but management took advantage of the market‘s dip to make strategic bets in energy. If you’re a GE investor, you need to understand how these bets could drive this company to become the world’s infrastructure leader. At the same time, you need to be aware of the threats to GE‘s portfolio. To help, we’re offering comprehensive coverage for investors in a premium report on General Electric, in which our industrials analyst breaks down GE‘s multiple businesses. You’ll find reasons to buy or sell GE today. To get started, click here now.
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From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/14/what-does-ges-energy-purchase-say-about-the-indust/
By MilkyTech
By Blake Bos and Isaac Pino, CPA, The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
In this video, Isaac Pino highlights a strong business segment of General Electric — namely, its aviation division. Many foreign countries, including emerging markets, have been growing their airlines, and GE jet engines are a popular choice. Aviation makes up 13% of GE‘s revenues and has a strong backlog, which not only bodes well for GE aviation but also may signal general economic growth in these foreign countries. Isaac says GE‘s aviation products may be a stepping stone for the company’s other divisions to take advantage of these other growth opportunities.
For GE, the recent financial crisis struck a blow, but management took advantage of the market‘s dip to make strategic bets in energy. If you’re a GE investor, you need to understand how these bets could drive this company to become the world’s infrastructure leader. At the same time, you need to be aware of the threats to GE‘s portfolio. To help, we’re offering comprehensive coverage for investors in a premium report on General Electric, in which our industrials analyst breaks down GE‘s multiple businesses. You’ll find reasons to buy or sell GE today. To get started, click here now.
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From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/13/1-business-thats-soaring-at-ge/
By Aimee Duffy and Tyler Crowe, The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
In today’s great energy debate, it often seems like you have to be on one side or the other. You are either for oil and gas or for renewables. Realistically, however, it is likely that a combination of fossil fuels and alternative energy will be our path forward. In this video, Fool.com contributor Aimee Duffy talks to fellow contributor Tyler Crowe about four companies that give investors exposure to a multitude of energy options, covering everything from oil and gas to wind and solar.
For GE, the recent financial crisis struck a blow, but management took advantage of the market‘s dip to make strategic bets in energy. If you’re a GE investor, you need to understand how these bets could drive this company to become the world’s infrastructure leader. At the same time, you need to be aware of the threats to GE‘s portfolio. To help, we’re offering comprehensive coverage for investors in a premium report on General Electric, in which our industrials analyst breaks down GE‘s multiple businesses. You’ll find reasons to buy or sell GE today. To get started, click here now.
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From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/12/investing-in-all-of-the-above/