GE Oven F26 Error Code Fix (Door Lock Problem)
GE oven flashing F26? That usually means the door lock system isn’t talking correctly to the control board — here’s how to reset it, free a stuck latch, and know when to buy parts.
GE oven flashing F26? That usually means the door lock system isn’t talking correctly to the control board — here’s how to reset it, free a stuck latch, and know when to buy parts.
GE oven showing F29? That usually means the cooling fan circuit isn’t doing its job. Here’s the fast, no-nonsense way to track it down and decide if it’s worth fixing.
GE oven flashing F32 and refusing to heat? Here’s what that code actually means and the quickest real-world way to fix it.
GE oven showing F33? That means the oven temperature sensor circuit is bad or reading crazy. Here’s how to test it fast and know if it’s a cheap sensor or an expensive control board.
GE oven throwing F34 and shutting down? That usually means the cooling fan system or its feedback to the control board has failed. Here is the straight fix.
F35 on a GE oven means the control board doesn’t like the temperature sensor signal. Here’s the fast way to test the sensor, wiring, and board so you can clear the code.
GE oven showing F36? That usually means the control is losing the oven temperature sensor signal. Here is the fast, no-nonsense way to track it down and fix it.
GE oven flashing F42? That usually means the touch panel and main control board aren’t talking. Here’s how to reset it, check the wiring, and decide if it’s worth throwing parts at.
F43 on a GE oven is a cooling-fan / electronics-cooling fault. Here’s the straight diagnosis and fix path a real tech would use.
F47 on a GE oven means the control boards aren’t communicating; here’s how to reset, check wiring, and decide if a board swap is worth the money.