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HELP US HELP YOU…
Read this guide carefully.
It is intended to help you operate and maintain your
new refrigerator properly.
Keep it handy for answers to your questions.
If you don’t understand something or need
more help, call:
GE Answer Center
®
800.626.2000
24 hours a day, 7 days a week
Keep proof of original purchase date (such as your
sales slip or cancelled check) with this book to
establish the warranty period.
If you received a damaged refrigerator…
Immediately contact the dealer (or builder) that sold
you the refrigerator.
Save time and money.
Before you call for service…
Check the Problem Solver. It lists causes of minor
operating problems that you can correct yourself.
Write down the model and serial numbers.
You’ll find them on a label on the back of
the refrigerator.
These numbers are also on the Consumer Product
Ownership Registration Card that came with your
refrigerator. Before sending in this card, please write
these numbers here:
Model Number
Serial Number
Use these numbers in any correspondence or service
calls concerning your refrigerator.
IF YOU NEED SERVICE
To obtain service, see the Consumer Services page in
the back of this guide.
We’re proud of our service and want you to be
pleased. If for some reason you are not happy with the
service you receive, here are steps to follow for
further help.
FIRST, contact the people who serviced your
appliance. Explain why you are not pleased.
In most cases, this will solve the problem.
NEXT, if you are still not pleased, write all the
details—including your phone number—to:
Manager, Consumer Relations
GE Appliances
Appliance Park
Louisville, Kentucky 40225
Child entrapment and suffocation are not problems
of the past. Junked or abandoned refrigerators are still
dangerous…even if they will sit for “just a few days.” If
you are getting rid of your old refrigerator, please follow
the instructions below to help prevent accidents.
Before You Throw Away Your Old
Refrigerator or Freezer:
Take off the doors.
Leave the shelves in place so that children may not
easily climb inside.
CFC Disposal
Your old refrigerator has a cooling system that used CFCs
(chlorofluorocarbons). CFCs are believed to harm
stratospheric ozone.
If you are throwing away your old refrigerator, make sure
the CFC refrigerant is removed for proper disposal by a
qualified servicer. If you intentionally release this CFC
refrigerant you can be subject to fines and imprisonment
under provisions of environmental legislation.
DANGER! RISK OF CHILD ENTRAPMENT
Proper Disposal of the Refrigerator
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