Range High Severity
F2 Appliance Error Code

Dacor Range F2 Error: Oven over-temperature

This dacor range f2 error code guide explains what this fault means for your Dacor appliance and how to respond safely. What F2 Means on a Dacor Range F2 means the oven exceeded its maximum safe temperature limit. The control board cuts the burner immediately. This often happens during self-clean cycles or if a gas […]

~15%

DIY Fixable

From $275

Typical Repair Cost

60-120 min

Pro Repair Time

Quick Assessment

Answer to continue safely

Is it safe to keep using?

No. The range oven exceeded its safe temperature limit. Continued use risks fire and cabinetry damage.

Can I reset the code?

Yes. After full cool-down, a breaker reset may clear F2. Monitor closely during the next cycle.

When to stop immediately?

Stop if you notice: Do not restart the oven until it has fully cooled and the cause is identified, Stop self-clean cycles immediately if F2 appears — overheating during self-clean can crack porcelain or damage electronics.

Symptoms You May Notice

Food comes out scorched or heavily overcooked

Items in the oven are burnt or charred because the cavity exceeded the programmed temperature by a significant margin before the safety cutoff engaged.

Oven shuts off abruptly during cooking

The oven stops heating mid-cycle, the display shows F2, and the unit enters a safety lockout that prevents further operation until cooled.

Burning smell and visible smoke from cavity

Smoke or a strong burning odor emanates from the oven due to extreme temperatures scorching food residue, grease, or spills on the cavity walls.

Oven door and exterior surfaces abnormally hot

The door glass, handle, and surrounding cabinetry feel much hotter than normal because the cavity exceeded 590 degrees F bake or 990 degrees F clean threshold.

Possible Causes

1

Stuck-closed relay on the control board

A relay controlling the bake or broil circuit has welded shut from electrical arcing, keeping the heating element energized even when the board commands it off.

Requires Professional
2

RTD sensor reading low resistance

The temperature sensor reports lower resistance than actual, making the board think the oven is cooler than it really is and continuing to heat past the setpoint.

DIY Possible

Safe Checks You Can Do

These checks are safe for homeowners. No disassembly required. Do not remove panels or access internal components.
  1. 1

    Cool down and power off immediately

    Do not open the oven door. Turn off the 240V breaker and allow the oven to cool for at least 45 minutes before touching or inspecting anything.

    Opening the door during an over-temperature event releases a blast of superheated air. Wait until the exterior feels cool to the touch.

  2. 2

    Test RTD sensor resistance after cooling

    Once the oven is completely cool, disconnect the RTD probe and measure resistance with a multimeter. It should read approximately 1080 ohms at room temperature.

    A reading below 900 ohms at room temperature indicates the sensor is drifting low, which would cause the board to overheat the cavity.

    Tools required

When to Call a Professional

Contact a qualified technician if:

  • Gas valve appears stuck open or oven heats uncontrollably — gas valve replacement required
  • RTD probe reads correctly but oven still overheats — control board replacement needed
  • Code occurs every self-clean cycle without clearing — oven requires professional calibration

Need Professional Help?

Find qualified technicians in your area for proper diagnostics and repair.

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