State Water Heater E10 Error Code — What It Means
The E10 fault code on State residential hybrid electric heat pump water heaters indicates a temperature sensor circuit problem. The unit’s built-in diagnostics system has detected an issue with one of the thermistors that monitor water temperature or the wiring connected to it. This code is part of the E10 through E60 series of manufacturer fault codes and specifically points to a sensor or sensor-wiring fault rather than a heating element or compressor failure.
When E10 appears, the water heater may stop heating or switch to a backup heating mode depending on which sensor is affected. The most common causes are a failed temperature sensor, corroded or loose connector pins at the sensor harness, or damage to the wiring between the sensor and the control board. State’s service guidance recommends using the unit’s built-in diagnostics along with a multimeter to isolate the fault before replacing components.
Common Causes
- Failed temperature sensor or thermistor The sensor itself can fail internally due to age, water exposure, or electrical stress, causing an open or short circuit that the control board interprets as E10.
- Loose or corroded sensor connector The plug connecting the sensor harness to the control board or sensor can develop corrosion, bent pins, or poor contact, interrupting the signal.
- Damaged sensor wiring or harness The wires running from the sensor can chafe against metal edges, get pinched during service, or suffer insulation breakdown, creating intermittent or open circuits.
- Water intrusion at sensor terminals Moisture can enter the sensor probe or connector housing and cause a short or erratic resistance reading that triggers the fault code.
- Control board input circuit fault If the sensor and wiring test correctly, the control board’s own sensor input circuitry may be damaged and reading the signal incorrectly.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Power off the unit at the circuit breaker and wait two minutes, then restore power and check if the E10 code clears or returns immediately.
- Enter the built-in diagnostics menu by following the button sequence in your model’s service manual and document whether E10 is active, intermittent, or accompanied by other codes.
- Inspect the temperature sensor connector at the control board and at the sensor probe for corrosion, moisture, bent pins, or looseness, and clean or reseat the connection.
- Measure the temperature sensor resistance with a multimeter across the sensor leads and compare the reading to your model’s specification table, checking for open circuits, shorts to ground, or values far outside the expected range for the current water temperature.
- Check wiring continuity and insulation between the sensor and control board using a multimeter, looking for breaks, shorts to ground, or intermittent connections when you flex the harness.
- Replace the temperature sensor if it reads open, shorted, or outside specification, following the manufacturer’s disassembly procedure and using the correct part number for your model.
- Test the unit by restoring power, running a heating cycle, and verifying that E10 does not return and that the display shows normal temperature readings.
- Replace the control board only if the sensor, wiring, and all connectors test correctly and the E10 code persists after sensor replacement.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Temperature sensor / thermistor | Amazon | Order by your exact State model number to get the correct probe length and resistance specification. |
| Sensor wiring harness | Amazon | Replace if wires are chafed, corroded, or pins are damaged beyond cleaning. |
| Control board | Amazon | Required only if sensor circuit tests correctly but E10 persists after all other repairs. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a licensed technician if you are not comfortable working with 240-volt electrical circuits or using a multimeter to test sensor resistance and continuity. Professional help is also needed if the sensor and wiring test within specification but the E10 code will not clear, because control board diagnosis and replacement require detailed knowledge of the unit’s internal diagnostics and proper grounding procedures. If your unit is under warranty, contact State’s service network before attempting any repairs to avoid voiding coverage.