Dacor Oven F12 Error: Thermal cutout tripped
This dacor oven f12 error code guide explains what this fault means for your Dacor appliance and how to respond safely. What F12 Means on a Dacor Oven F12 indicates the high-limit thermal cutout has tripped — a non-resettable safety device that cuts power to the heating circuit when the oven chassis reaches an unsafe […]
~15%
DIY Fixable
From $225
Typical Repair Cost
60-120 min
Pro Repair Time
Quick Assessment
Answer to continue safely
Is it safe to keep using?
No. The thermal cutout tripped to prevent overheating. The oven should not be used until the root cause is identified.
Can I reset the code?
No. The thermal cutout is a non-resettable safety fuse on most Dacor models. It requires physical replacement.
When to stop immediately?
Stop if you notice: Do not restart the oven until the root cause of overheating has been identified — repeated thermal cutout trips cause permanent damage to board components and wiring insulation., Stop if F12 accompanied by burning plastic smell — the board or wiring may have already been heat-damaged..
Symptoms You May Notice
Oven stops heating completely and will not restart
The oven goes completely cold — no bake element glow, no igniter activity, and no heat output of any kind. This distinguishes F12 from sensor faults where heating may be intermittent.
F12 displayed after an unusually long or high-heat cooking session
The code appears after extended roasting at high temperatures, after a self-clean cycle, or after the oven ran significantly longer than usual — all conditions that can push chassis temperatures to the cutout limit.
Oven interior and exterior panels are extremely hot
The oven cavity and surrounding cabinet area are much hotter than normal at the time F12 appears, indicating that heat buildup inside the chassis triggered the safety device.
F12 does not clear with a standard power cycle
Unlike board faults, a tripped thermal cutout cannot be reset remotely — it requires the oven to cool and the cutout to be physically inspected or replaced.
Possible Causes
Thermal cutout tripped by genuine overheating
The oven chassis exceeded the cutout's rated temperature, typically caused by a failed cooling fan (E2), a blocked vent, or an extended self-clean cycle on an older oven with reduced thermal capacity.
Requires ProfessionalFailed thermal cutout opening prematurely
The thermal cutout has aged and its bimetallic element no longer holds its calibrated trip temperature, causing it to open at normal operating temperatures. This requires cutout replacement even if no overheating occurred.
Requires ProfessionalSafe Checks You Can Do
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1
Allow the oven to fully cool
Turn off the circuit breaker and allow the oven at least 2 hours to cool completely. Some thermal cutouts are auto-resettable and will close again once cooled — power cycle after full cooling to test if F12 clears.
Do not shorten the cool-down period — a partially cooled cutout may re-trip immediately on restart.
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2
Check for vent obstruction
With the oven cool, inspect all ventilation slots on the oven top, rear, and inside the cabinet cutout above the oven for blockage from objects, insulation, or dust buildup. Restricted airflow is a primary cause of chassis overheating.
Dacor built-in wall ovens require a minimum clearance above and behind the unit — consult the installation guide for required dimensions.
When to Call a Professional
Contact a qualified technician if:
- F12 does not clear after full cool-down and power cycle — thermal cutout has failed open and requires physical replacement inside the oven chassis.
- F12 returned within one cook cycle after a repair — root cause (cooling fan, ventilation restriction) was not fully resolved.
- Thermal cutout location on Dacor DOB/HWO models requires partial oven removal from the cabinet — professional access required.
Need Professional Help?
Find qualified technicians in your area for proper diagnostics and repair.
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