A GE oven that stays cold usually points to a bad element, wrong settings, or a power supply issue.
You turn the dial, set the temp, and nothing happens. No glow from the bottom and dinner plans stall. This guide walks you through fast checks and deeper fixes for a GE electric range that refuses to warm. Start with easy checks, then parts you can test or replace.
Fast Checks Before You Grab Tools
Knock out these quick items right away. Each takes under a minute and often solves it without parts.
| Symptom | Likely Cause | What To Try |
|---|---|---|
| No heat in Bake | Lower element burned out, blown fuse, or wrong mode | Switch to Bake, set 350°F, watch for glow; inspect element |
| Top browns, bottom raw | Broil works, Bake failed | Run Broil to confirm top element; plan to replace Bake element |
| Everything dark and unresponsive | Tripped breaker or loose cord | Reset double-pole breaker; verify cord connection |
| Display on, no heat | Partial voltage | Range needs 240/208V; one leg missing stops heating |
| Timer counts down, no heat | Delay Start or special mode | Cancel delay; exit special modes |
| Bake starts, then shuts off | Over-temp or sensor fault | Check for fault code; cool and retry |
Power Supply Rules For Electric Ranges
These ovens run on a two-leg supply, not a standard 120V outlet. Lights and the clock can work on one leg while the cavity stays cold. Partial feed is common after one breaker leg trips.
Go to the service panel and flip the range’s paired breaker fully OFF, then back ON. If heat returns, the line was half-dead. If it repeats, have an electrician inspect the receptacle and cord for damage or heat marks. GE notes that electric ranges require 240/208V on a dedicated branch circuit; a weak connection can leave the oven stuck at room temp.
Make Sure Settings Aren’t Blocking Heat
Control locks, delayed starts, or special features can block heating even when the display looks normal. Two settings trip a lot of owners:
Sabbath Mode
This feature changes control behavior, hiding feedback and ignoring inputs during observance periods. If the oven seems unresponsive after a power blip during that feature, you may need to exit the mode and reset the control.
Delay Start
If a delay was set by accident, the timer counts down while the oven stays idle. Cancel the delay and start a normal Bake cycle to test.
Visual Inspection: Elements, Wiring, And Door
Kill power first. Pull the range forward and unplug, or switch the breaker OFF. With a flashlight, scan the lower and upper elements. A failed element often shows a bubble, split, or bright spot. Any crack means it is done.
Look through the rear access panel for loose spade connectors on element leads. Gently tug each lead. If a connector slides off easily or looks heat-discolored, replace the terminal and damaged wire. Confirm the door closes tight; a bent hinge can leak heat and stretch preheat times.
How To Test A Bake Element
Unplug the range. Remove two screws that hold the lower element to the back wall. Ease it forward, detach the two push-on terminals, and lift it out. Many GE models use a rabbit-ear style replacement that screws right in. Swap in a new part if the old one is open or visibly damaged.
Continuity Check
Set a multimeter to continuity or a low ohm scale. Touch a probe to each terminal. A steady tone or a low reading indicates the loop is intact. No tone means the coil opened and will never heat.
Broil Works But Bake Doesn’t
This is the classic clue that the top element still fires while the bottom is dead. Start a Broil cycle to confirm the top glows bright. If Broil passes but the oven won’t rise in Bake, the lower coil is the first suspect. Replace it and retest. If both glow yet temp stays low, shift attention to the sensor or control.
Oven Sensor And Fault Codes
Modern ranges watch temperature through a thin probe near the rear wall. When the probe misreads, the control may throw an error code and halt heating. Many GE models display codes like F2 when the cavity overheats, or F3/F4 for a sensor problem. Clear the code by cycling power, then start Bake again to test. If the code returns, the sensor or wiring likely needs service. For a deeper list, see GE’s fault code guide.
Calibrating Temperature After A Fix
After replacing parts, you may find cookies finish too light or roasts overshoot. GE controls include an offset feature that lets you bump the set point up or down by small steps. The adjustment range varies by model, usually within a few dozen degrees. Once set, the offset persists through power interruptions.
Step-By-Step Heating Recovery Plan
1) Confirm Power
Reset the paired breaker. If the clock works but heat never starts, measure voltage at the receptacle or call a pro. You need both legs present.
2) Rule Out Modes
Cancel any delayed cycle. Exit special modes. Start Bake at 350°F and watch for a glow from the lower coil within a minute or two.
3) Inspect Lower Element
Look for blisters or breaks. If damaged, replace. If it looks fine, pull it and check continuity. No continuity means it is done.
4) Check Upper Element
Start Broil. If the top glows, that circuit is alive. If not, the issue may be broader than one element.
5) Look For Codes
Scan the display during or after a failed heat attempt. Write down any F-code; it points you to the next move.
6) Evaluate Sensor And Wiring
Inspect the probe harness behind the rear panel for loose plugs. If codes persist, plan a sensor replacement or board diagnosis.
When Heat Stops Mid-Cycle
If the oven warms then shuts down, think airflow and shutdown logic. Cooling fans on some models purge heat from the control area. A blocked vent or failed fan can make the board protect itself by stopping the cycle. Clear the vent path and try again. If you see a fan-related code, the fan circuit needs attention.
Door, Gasket, And Preheat Times
A torn gasket bleeds heat and drags preheat times. Run a sheet of paper around the perimeter with the door closed; it should hold firmly. Replace the gasket if the paper slides freely. Give the oven 10–15 minutes to preheat; large cavities and stoneware add time.
Parts You May Need
Here are frequent replacements when a GE electric range stays cool. Match by model number before you buy.
| Part | What It Does | When To Replace |
|---|---|---|
| Bake element | Heats from the bottom in Bake | Cracked, blistered, or no continuity |
| Broil element | Top heat for searing and balancing | No glow in Broil, open circuit |
| Oven sensor | Reads cavity temperature | F3/F4 codes, wild temp swings |
| Control board | Routes power to elements | Correct power in, bad output or persistent control errors |
| Door gasket | Seals heat at the door | Gaps, tears, or poor paper test |
Safety Notes While You Diagnose
Always kill power before touching wiring. Elements cool slowly; handle with care. If you see sparks, melting plastic odor, or scorched terminals, stop and schedule service. Surface burners can still work when an oven element fails, so that alone doesn’t prove the power feed is fine.
When To Call A Technician
If both elements test good, voltage is solid, and codes point to the control, professional diagnosis is the fastest route. Complex faults in fan circuits, relays, and boards need insulated tools and training. Document every step and code; it helps the tech finish faster.
Why Electric GE Ranges Lose Heat
Most no-heat calls trace back to three buckets: a burned-out lower coil, a partial power feed, or a mis-set control. Start with those and you’ll fix most cases in a single session. If parts are needed, they install with basic hand tools on many models.
