Step-by-step fix
Step 1: Make sure the oven sensor is a likely cause
- Look for symptoms that point to a bad sensor, such as an oven that runs too hot, too cool, heats unevenly, or takes much longer than normal to reach temperature.
- Check whether the display shows a temperature-related fault or whether bake and broil elements still come on but the oven temperature is clearly wrong.
- Rule out simpler issues first, like incorrect oven settings, a tripped breaker, or a loose power cord on a plug-in unit.
- Open the oven and find the sensor probe on the rear wall inside the oven cavity. It is usually a thin metal rod held by two screws.
If it works: The symptoms fit a temperature-sensing problem and you have identified the oven sensor inside the oven cavity.
If it doesn’t: If the oven is completely dead, will not power on, or has no heat at all in any mode, the problem may be elsewhere and this may not be the right repair.
Stop if:- You smell burning insulation, see melted wiring, or find obvious heat damage around the sensor area.
- The part inside the oven does not match a typical sensor probe and you are not confident you have identified the right component.
Step 2: Shut off power and prepare the oven
- Turn the oven off at the control.
- Disconnect power by unplugging the range or switching off the correct breaker.
- Make sure the oven is fully cool before reaching inside.
- Remove the oven racks so you have room to work and set them aside.
- Put on gloves and use a flashlight to locate the sensor screws clearly.
If it works: The oven is cool, de-energized, and clear enough to work on safely.
If it doesn’t: If you cannot confirm power is off, stop and identify the correct plug or breaker before touching the sensor wiring.
Stop if:- You cannot safely disconnect power to the oven.
- The oven is still hot enough to burn you.
Step 3: Remove the old oven sensor
- Take out the screws holding the sensor to the back wall of the oven.
- Pull the sensor straight toward you a few inches so the wire harness comes through the opening.
- Support the connector so it does not slip back into the hole.
- Disconnect the old sensor from the harness by separating the plug connection carefully without yanking on the wires.
If it works: The old oven sensor is free and the wire connector is accessible for the new part.
If it doesn’t: If the connector slips back, use needle-nose pliers carefully to bring it forward without damaging the wires or insulation.
Stop if:- The connector or wiring is burnt, brittle, or crumbling.
- The sensor wire disappears into the cabinet and will not pull forward enough to disconnect without forcing it.
Step 4: Install the new oven sensor
- Compare the new oven sensor to the old one to make sure the connector style, probe length, and mounting bracket match.
- Connect the new sensor plug firmly to the oven harness.
- Tuck the connector and extra wire back through the opening gently so the wires do not get pinched.
- Line up the mounting holes and reinstall the sensor screws snugly without overtightening.
If it works: The new oven sensor is connected securely and mounted flat against the rear oven wall.
If it doesn’t: If the new part does not match the old one exactly enough to mount and connect cleanly, pause and verify the replacement using your oven model information.
Stop if:- The replacement connector is different or the mounting bracket does not line up.
- The wall opening or insulation is damaged enough that the sensor cannot mount securely.
Step 5: Reassemble and restore power
- Reinstall the oven racks.
- Close the oven door and restore power by plugging the unit back in or turning the breaker on.
- Set the oven to a normal bake temperature and let it begin heating.
- Watch for normal startup behavior without unusual smells, sparking, or error codes.
If it works: The oven powers up normally and starts a bake cycle with no immediate wiring or control issues.
If it doesn’t: If the control shows a fault right away, turn the oven off and recheck the sensor connection and part fit.
Stop if:- You see sparking, smell hot plastic, or the breaker trips after restoring power.
Step 6: Verify the repair with real heating
- Let the oven preheat fully and give it a little extra time to stabilize after the preheat signal.
- Check that the oven now reaches and holds temperature more normally than before.
- Run a short cooking test or monitor one full bake cycle to confirm the temperature problem is gone.
- Pay attention to whether the oven cycles heat on and off normally instead of overheating or lagging badly.
If it works: The oven heats and cycles normally, and the original temperature problem is resolved.
If it doesn’t: If the oven still runs far too hot, too cool, or shows the same fault, the issue may be with the control, wiring, or another heating component and further diagnosis is the next step.
Stop if:- The same severe overheating, repeated fault codes, or electrical symptoms return during the test cycle.
Replacement Parts
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FAQ
What does an oven sensor do?
The oven sensor measures the temperature inside the oven cavity and sends that information to the control. The control uses that reading to cycle the heat on and off.
How do I know if the oven sensor is bad?
Common signs are an oven that overcooks, undercooks, takes too long to preheat, or shows a temperature-related fault. If the oven still powers on and heats but the temperature is clearly wrong, the sensor is a common cause.
Do I need to pull the whole oven out to replace the sensor?
Usually no. On many ovens, the sensor is removed from inside the oven cavity by taking out two screws and disconnecting the harness just behind the rear wall opening.
Can I use the oven with a failing sensor?
It is better not to rely on it. A failing sensor can cause poor temperature control, uneven cooking, or overheating, which can make the oven unsafe or unreliable.
What if the new sensor does not fix the problem?
If the symptoms stay the same, the fault may be in the wiring, electronic control, or another heating-related part. Recheck the connector and part match first, then move on to further diagnosis.