Ovens High Severity
F4 Appliance Error Code

Monogram Ovens F4 Error: Oven temperature sensor shorted

The F4 error code on a GE Monogram oven indicates that the oven temperature sensor (RTD probe) has shorted — its resistance has dropped below the minimum threshold the control board considers valid. A shorted sensor sends an artificially low resistance signal, causing the board to interpret the oven as far hotter than it actually is, and the system halts heating as a safety precaution.

~55%

DIY Fixable

From $75

Typical Repair Cost

0.5-1 hrs

Pro Repair Time

Quick Assessment

Answer to continue safely

Is it safe to keep using?

No. Do not use the oven while F4 is active. Without a functioning temperature sensor the control board cannot regulate heat, creating a potential overheating hazard.

Can I reset the code?

No. A power reset clears the code display, but F4 returns the moment the oven attempts to read the shorted sensor. The sensor or harness must be repaired first.

When to stop immediately?

Stop if you notice: Stop using the oven immediately when F4 appears — uncontrolled temperature is a fire risk., Do not attempt to use bake or broil functions as workarounds while F4 is present..

Symptoms You May Notice

Oven refuses to heat or shuts off very shortly after the heating element energizes.

F4 error code displayed on the control panel, often within seconds of starting a bake or broil cycle.

Oven temperature reading on the display appears frozen at a very high value or jumps immediately to the upper limit.

Self-clean cycle will not initiate, aborting at the start with the F4 fault.

Possible Causes

1

Shorted RTD temperature sensor probe — internal wiring inside the probe has failed, causing a direct short circuit between the sensor leads.

DIY Possible
2

Damaged sensor wiring harness — the two-wire cable running from the sensor to the control board has a short caused by insulation damage or a pinched wire.

DIY Possible
3

Faulty control board sensor input circuit — less commonly, the board itself has a damaged input that reads any sensor as shorted.

Requires Professional

Safe Checks You Can Do

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

    Test the temperature sensor resistance

    With the oven unplugged and cool, locate the temperature sensor probe mounted on the rear interior oven wall. Disconnect the sensor connector and measure resistance across the two sensor terminals with a multimeter. At room temperature (approximately 70 degrees Fahrenheit) a good sensor reads approximately 1,080 to 1,100 ohms. A shorted sensor reads near zero ohms.

    A reading below 500 ohms at room temperature confirms the sensor is shorted and must be replaced.

  2. 2

    Inspect the sensor wiring harness

    Trace the two-wire harness from the sensor connector at the rear of the oven cavity back toward the control board. Look for any pinched sections, melted insulation, or areas where bare wires touch each other or the oven cavity wall.

    Pay close attention to areas where the harness passes through oven cavity walls — grommets can fail, allowing the metal edge to cut the insulation.

When to Call a Professional

Contact a qualified technician if:

  • The sensor tests shorted on a multimeter — replacement is straightforward, but if the new sensor also reads shorted, the control board input circuit has failed and requires professional service.
  • The sensor and harness both test normal but F4 still appears, indicating a control board fault.

Need Professional Help?

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

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