Waiting on my fave HVAC guy to come over. I shut the system off over night to allow for the evap coil to melt. Will leave it off until post repair. In the mean times, this Fall weather is brital. I woke up this morning to the ice maker in my Whirlpool Conquest ( model gd25dixhb02) not working. Jinxy, your beloved bastard! I know I can remove it as a complete assembly and there must be a model number on the maker itself. Parts catalogs only list individual pieces that make up the assembly, but it looks like I could get a replacement unit off of Amazon.
You need to hear my ice maker anecdote. Back in July, mine stopped working. I started troubleshooting the issue and it turns out the ice maker issues can be caused by a handful of things. The line could be frozen, the freezer sensors may not tell the ice maker it's cold enough to make ice...so it doesn't bother to kick the fill solenoid on... My Kenmore fridge turns out to be manufactured by the dreaded LG corporation (I was stuck with that model due to size limitations in my kitchen)
After thawing my fridge out to make sure the water line wasn't frozen, I started noticing the fridge wasn't cooling as it should. I could hear the freezer to fridge fans coming on and the defroster cycle appeared to be working correctly, but the drain was still icing up in the freezer pan. For about $50, I replaced the 2 temp sensors and the defrost sensor (that replaced the old timer circuits). That got it back running again in the correct cycles. I believe, the one sensor that failed was actually a $7 part in the fridge side that caused the bottom to ice up.
Moral of the story, ice makers are usually subject to problems that may start elsewhere.