Usually the breaker will trip.
industry standard practice. the electrical load from a combination range is the same as the combined loads from a wall oven and countertop. so your panel and electric service will handle it. BUT the range will be on a single circuit and you must ensure that the range circuit requirements are met. the circuit requirements are on the nameplate. for example, if the range requires a 30 amp circuit and your wall oven was a 30 amp circuit then you can use the wall oven circuit. but if the range requires a 40 amp circuit, then you have to pull a 40 amp circuit from the panel to the range.
An electrical short in the wiring, or a defect in the oven itself. Have it checked out by a qualified technician.
If the fuse is properly sized for the installation and the fuse holder is in good condition.... there is a short circuit, probably in the oven heater element or broiler element, where the element has gone bad. EXTREME CARE must be taken in replacement of the element or other troubleshooting that must be done..DEFER TO A QUALIFIED PERSON !!
In an oven. The "hot" wire is in series with the ove thermostat and provides an isolated circuit for turning on the oven element(s).
That would be a 40 amp 220v circuit. Circuit breaker is 40 amps and wire is 8 awg. Should use solid copper wire. Follow oven installation instructions.
No, the electrical code requires that each be on it's own circuit.
Microwave oven
An electric oven must be on a dedicated circuit. Unless you already have a 220 Volt circuit available, you will have to run a wire from the fuse panel to the stove. Call a licensed electrician.
If a strawberry is placed in a hot oven, it will cook.
it cooks and if left long enough in the oven it burns. only if the oven is on.
This is short for combination oven. Two kinds of ovens in one.
solar energy
industry standard practice. the electrical load from a combination range is the same as the combined loads from a wall oven and countertop. so your panel and electric service will handle it. BUT the range will be on a single circuit and you must ensure that the range circuit requirements are met. the circuit requirements are on the nameplate. for example, if the range requires a 30 amp circuit and your wall oven was a 30 amp circuit then you can use the wall oven circuit. but if the range requires a 40 amp circuit, then you have to pull a 40 amp circuit from the panel to the range.
It melts
Short answer: probably not. Longer answer: It depends on the size of wire feeding the stove, the stove amperage, and what you intend to connect to the new 15A circuit. If you just want to wire a light for the garage, sure go ahead. If you want to install a receptacle for a microwave oven, no way. Make sure you put a fuse to protect the circuit you are connecting.
To switch from a gas oven to an electric oven, you'll only need to purchase the oven, close the valve on your gas line, and make sure that you have a proper sized circuit available in your home.
An electrical short in the wiring, or a defect in the oven itself. Have it checked out by a qualified technician.