Maytag Range F3 Error Code — What It Means
The F3 error family on Maytag ranges and ovens signals a fault in the temperature sensing circuit. The exact subcode matters: F3 E2 typically points to the oven temperature sensor, warming drawer sensor if equipped, or the wiring between sensor and control. F3 E1 on wall ovens identifies the lower oven temperature sensor, control, or associated wiring. In every case the control board has detected an open, shorted, or unstable signal from the temperature probe and has shut down oven operation to prevent unsafe heating.
Common Causes
- Failed oven temperature sensor The sensor probe inside the oven cavity has gone open-circuit or drifted out of range and is the most common field repair.
- Loose or corroded wiring connector The plug between the sensor harness and the control can corrode, back out, or develop heat damage from years of thermal cycling.
- Damaged sensor harness The wires running from the probe to the control board can fray, melt, or short against oven sheet metal.
- Control board failure Cracked solder joints at the sensor connector on the board or failed components in the sensing circuit will trigger F3 even when the probe is good.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Turn off the circuit breaker to the range for one full minute, restore power, and check whether the fault clears. A momentary glitch can latch the code until power is cycled.
- Unplug the range or turn off the breaker again for safety, then pull the range forward or remove the back panel to access the oven temperature sensor. The probe is a metal tube mounted through the rear wall of the oven cavity.
- Inspect the sensor connector and harness for burn marks, melted insulation, corrosion, or loose pins. Wiggle the connector and look for intermittent contact.
- Measure resistance across the sensor terminals with the harness disconnected and compare to your model’s service data. If the circuit is open, shorted, or far out of range, replace the sensor and any damaged wiring.
- If the sensor and wiring measure correct, remove the control board cover and inspect the sensor connector solder joints on the printed circuit board for cracks. Reflow any suspect joints or replace the entire control if other components have failed.
- Reassemble the range, restore power, and run the oven through a full bake cycle to confirm the temperature climbs smoothly and the F3 code does not return.
- Record the repair date and monitor the oven for the next few uses to catch intermittent faults that only appear under heat.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Oven temperature sensor probe | Amazon | Match the connector type and mounting bracket to your Maytag model number. |
| Sensor wiring harness | Amazon | Order if insulation is melted or wires are pinched beyond repair. |
| Electronic control board (ERC/clock) | Amazon | Required when sensor and harness test good but the fault persists. Verify board part number from the label. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a qualified appliance technician if you are not comfortable working inside a 240-volt range, if you do not own a multimeter and cannot measure sensor resistance safely, or if the fault returns after you have replaced the sensor and inspected the wiring. Control board diagnosis and solder rework require experience with live and stored high voltage. A technician will also have access to the full service manual resistance tables and can verify that the control is receiving correct signals before replacing expensive parts.