GE Oven F43 Fix (Cooling Fan Error Code Guide)

What This Error Means

F43 on a GE oven means the control board thinks the internal cooling fan for the electronics isn’t doing its job (fan speed / cooling fault).

Translated: the oven is shutting down because it can’t move enough air past the control, either from a bad fan, blocked airflow, or a failing board.

Most GE ranges and wall ovens use F43 for this same cooling-fan problem, but if your unit’s tech sheet says something slightly different, follow that.

Official Fix

Do it the safe way first.

  • Kill power at the breaker or unplug the oven. This is 240V — don’t poke around live.

Now walk through this, roughly what the GE manual and service sheet want you to do:

  • 1. Try a hard reset. Turn the breaker off for 5–10 minutes, then back on and start a bake cycle. If F43 comes right back, it’s not a glitch — move on.
  • 2. Check vents and basic airflow.
    • Look along the top front trim and rear of the oven for vents. Make sure cabinets, foil, or sheet pans aren’t blocking them.
    • Start a bake cycle and listen: you should hear a fan ramp up and feel a light stream of warm air from the top/front once it’s been on a bit.
    • No fan sound or airflow while F43 appears = cooling fan system problem.
  • 3. Pull the unit and open the back.
    • Shut power back off.
    • Slide the range out or pull the wall oven far enough to remove the rear metal cover.
    • The control-cooling fan is usually a small blower near the main control board, in a sheet-metal housing.
  • 4. Inspect the fan mechanically.
    • Spin the fan by hand. It should spin freely, not stiff or crunchy.
    • Look for heavy dust, grease, or melted plastic blocking the blades or intake.
    • Check for broken blades or a fan rubbing the housing.
  • 5. Inspect wiring and connectors.
    • Follow the wires from the control board to the fan.
    • Look for burnt connectors, loose plugs, or damaged insulation.
    • Reseat the plugs firmly. If anything is melted or crispy, that harness/connector needs replacing.
  • 6. Electrical test of the fan (if you have a meter and know how to use it).
    • Restore power with the fan still accessible. Start a bake cycle so the oven calls for cooling.
    • Carefully measure voltage at the fan connector (expect 120V on most models). Stay clear of bare metal; live power will bite.
    • Voltage present but fan dead or just twitching = bad fan motor. Replace the cooling fan assembly.
    • No voltage leaving the board to the fan while F43 is set and wiring is good = failed control board.
  • 7. Replace the bad part.
    • Bad fan → swap in a new OEM or quality-compatible cooling fan / blower.
    • Fan and wiring check out but F43 persists every time → replace the main oven control board (ERC).
  • 8. Button up and test.
    • Reinstall the rear cover, push the unit back in, restore power.
    • Run a 350°F bake for 20–30 minutes. Confirm the fan runs and the F43 code doesn’t return.

If any of this sounds over your head, this is a pretty standard service call for an appliance tech — 1–2 hours plus parts.

Is It Worth Fixing? (The Financial Verdict)

  • ✅ Fix: Oven is under ~10–12 years old, cabinet and glass are in good shape, and diagnosis points to just the cooling fan (typically a low-to-mid $$ part) or a single control board.
  • ⚠️ Debatable: Oven is 12–15+ years old, has other issues (slow preheat, weak burners, bad display), or needs both fan and control board — repair cost starts creeping over 40–50% of a new unit.
  • ❌ Replace: Oven is beat up, parts are discontinued, or quote for fan + board + labor is within a couple hundred of a new comparable GE or better model.

Parts You Might Need

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See also

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