Can I look up Frigidaire parts by model number?
Yes. For your Frigidaire electric range model LFEF3048QFA, looking up parts by the exact model number is the most reliable way to match compatible replacement parts (like a bake element, surface element switch, or oven sensor) to your specific range configuration.
Where to find the model number on LFEF3048QFA
Frigidaire lists the serial plate location for this range in the storage drawer area.
- Open the storage drawer and look for the serial plate label
- On some versions, you may need to remove the lower front panel to see the label
- Write down the full model number and serial number exactly as shown
- Keep the information with your paperwork for future part lookups
How to use the model number to get the right part
When you search by model number, you can narrow results to parts that fit your exact build.
- Enter LFEF3048QFA exactly (letters and numbers matter)
- Match the part by name and part number when possible
- Confirm the part’s location on the range (oven vs cooktop vs control panel)
- Use diagrams and descriptions to avoid ordering a similar-looking part
- Cross-check installation notes in the LFEF3048QFA owner's manual
Common parts customers look up by model number
Here are examples of model-matched parts that are commonly replaced on this range:
| What’s not working | Part you may need | Example for this model |
|---|---|---|
| Oven not heating in bake | Bake element | Range bake element 316075103 |
| Oven temperature seems off | Oven temperature sensor | Probe 316490000 |
| Surface element won’t regulate heat | Surface element control switch | Frigidaire Range Surface Element Control Switch (model-matched) |
Why it matters
Frigidaire ranges can look similar across model families, but element sizes, wiring harness connections, and control styles can vary. Using LFEF3048QFA ensures you are selecting parts intended for your exact electric range.
Last updated: February 2026
How do I tell what model my Frigidaire stove is?
Your Frigidaire stove’s model number is printed on the serial plate; on model LFEF3048QFA it’s typically found by opening the storage drawer (some models) or removing the lower front panel (some models). Write down both the model and serial number exactly as shown.
Where to look on a Frigidaire range
Check these common serial plate locations:
- Open the storage drawer and look on the frame area behind it
- Remove the lower front panel (kick plate) and look for the rating plate behind it
- Use a flashlight and read the full line of letters and numbers
- Copy the model number and serial number exactly (watch for 0 vs O)
- Take a clear photo so you can zoom in later
What the model number helps you do
Having the correct model number (for example, LFEF3048QFA) makes it much easier to match the right parts and instructions.
| If you need to… | The model number helps us… |
|---|---|
| Order a bake or broil part | Match the correct heating element style and mounting |
| Troubleshoot oven heating | Identify the correct control and sensor setup |
| Find cleaning and control steps | Point you to the right procedures in the guide |
Why it matters
Frigidaire ranges can look similar across multiple series; one character difference in the model number can change which bake element, surface element switch, or oven temperature sensor fits.
Helpful resources
- Use the LFEF3048QFA owner's manual to confirm serial plate location and record your model and serial numbers.
- Use the LFEF3048QFA installation guide if you need safe access to lower panels or leveling areas.
Last updated: February 2026
What would cause a Frigidaire oven to stop working?
On the Frigidaire LFEF3048QFA electric range, an oven that stops working is usually caused by a power interruption, a control fault (often shown as an F-code), or a failed heating component such as the bake element, broil element, or temperature sensor. Start with power and control reset checks, then test heat.
Quick checks we recommend first
- Confirm the range has power; after any outage, reset the clock and re-try Bake or Broil (the oven can resume operation when power returns).
- Press Clear Off to stop beeping and clear a fault, then try Bake again.
- If an F-code appears, shut off power for 5 minutes, restore power, set the clock, and re-test.
- Make sure the oven is not in (or stuck in) self-clean/lockout; the door lock indicator can flash while locking/unlocking.
- If the oven was left on, the built-in 12-hour energy saving shutoff may have turned it off; reselect the cooking mode.
Most common failed parts when the oven will not heat
If the display works but the oven will not heat, these are the most frequent culprits:
| Symptom | Most likely cause | What to check next |
|---|---|---|
| No heat on Bake, Broil works | Failed bake element | Inspect for blisters/breaks; test continuity; consider range bake element 316075103 |
| No heat on Broil, Bake works | Failed broil element | Visual damage; continuity test |
| Temps way off, long preheat | Bad oven temperature sensor | Compare resistance at room temp; consider probe 316490000 |
| Random beeping, F-codes repeat | Control fault | Follow reset steps; if recurring, service is typically needed |
Why it matters
An oven can “stop working” for two very different reasons: a control shutdown/fault (often recoverable with a reset) or a no-heat hardware failure (element or sensor). Separating “no power/no control” from “no heat” prevents replacing the wrong part.
Where to confirm model-specific steps
For the exact keypress sequences (Clear Off, lockout, self-clean behavior, and 12-hour shutoff settings), follow the LFEF3048QFA owner’s manual.
Last updated: February 2026




