Get free shipping on your order, with any water filter subscription. Find my filter

Open Hamburger Menu
Sears Parts Direct
Tips to find your model number
Frigidaire PLEB30S9FCB electric oven

Frigidaire PLEB30S9FCB electric oven Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Frigidaire PLEB30S9FCB electric oven, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

By Schematic
By Part
SELECT DIAGRAM
?

This is the number corresponding to the part on the diagram / schematic

Browse Parts for PLEB30S9FCB Wall Ovens

Frigidaire Electric Oven PLEB30S9FCB FAQs

Frigidaire Gallery is a mid-range line that feels more premium than basic Frigidaire models, but it is not considered ultra high-end luxury. You typically get upgraded styling, more features, and better cooking convenience at a price point below pro-style brands.

What “high end” usually means for wall ovens

In wall ovens, “high end” usually refers to pro-level build quality, advanced cooking systems, and premium finishes across the entire product line. Frigidaire Gallery generally sits one tier below that.

Common “high-end” expectations include:

  • Very tight temperature control and even baking across multiple racks
  • Premium control interfaces and more cooking modes
  • Quieter convection performance and better airflow design
  • Heavier-duty door hinges, racks, and trim
  • More serviceable, long-life components

For a Frigidaire wall oven like model PLEB30S9FCB, Gallery-level features are typically positioned as “affordable premium.” You get strong everyday performance and convenience features without the cost jump into luxury tiers.

Here is a practical way to think about it:

Tier Typical positioning What you usually get
Entry Value focused Basic bake and broil, fewer modes
Mid-range (Gallery) Affordable premium More features, upgraded styling, better usability
Luxury / pro Premium and pro-style Highest-end materials, advanced cooking systems

Why it matters when shopping parts and planning repairs

Knowing the tier helps set expectations for repair decisions. Mid-range ovens often justify replacing common wear items (like a light bulb, temperature sensor, or door seal) to extend life and keep performance consistent.

If you are troubleshooting performance or temperature issues, we use the same fundamentals regardless of tier:

  • Confirm the oven is preheating fully and not losing heat through the door seal
  • Check for temperature accuracy issues (sensor-related problems are common)
  • Inspect heating performance if bake or broil seems weak

For model-specific operating tips and features, use the PLEB30S9FCB owner's manual.

Last updated: February 2026

On Frigidaire cooking products, the F30 code points to a problem with oven temperature sensing (most often the oven temperature sensor circuit). On your Frigidaire PLEB30S9FCB electric wall oven, start by clearing the code, then check the sensor connection and wiring; replace the sensor if it tests out of range.

What to do first (safe, quick checks)

  • Press CLEAR/OFF to stop the beeping and clear the display; if the code returns, treat it as an active fault.
  • Turn power off at the breaker for 1 minute, then restore power and retest.
  • If the oven recently ran self-clean, let it cool completely and retry; heat can aggravate weak sensor connections.
  • If the oven will not heat or heats erratically, focus on the sensor circuit first.

Likely causes of an F30 code

  • Loose or corroded connector at the oven temperature sensor
  • Pinched, burned, or broken sensor wiring harness
  • Failed oven temperature sensor (open/shorted or drifting resistance)
  • Less common: electronic oven control problem after the sensor circuit checks good

Parts that commonly fix F30 on this model

If your troubleshooting points to the sensor, the correct replacement is the Frigidaire range oven temperature sensor 316217002.

Symptom with F30 Most common issue Best next step
F30 appears immediately at power-up Open/shorted sensor circuit Inspect connector; ohm-test sensor
Oven overheats or temperature swings Sensor drifting out of spec Replace sensor
F30 appears intermittently Loose connection or damaged wiring Reseat connector; inspect harness

Why it matters

The control relies on the temperature sensor to regulate bake and broil safely. When the sensor signal is wrong, the oven can underheat, overheat, or shut down to protect the appliance.

Where to find model-specific steps

Use the troubleshooting and “Before you call” section in the PLEB30S9FCB owner's manual for control-panel key sequences and guidance on fault codes and resets.

Last updated: February 2026

To reset your Frigidaire PLEB30S9FCB wall oven, turn the oven off and cycle power at the breaker for about 1 minute, then restore power and reset the clock. This clears many control glitches after a power interruption and restores normal operation.

Quick reset steps (safe and effective)

  • Turn all oven functions off at the control panel.
  • Switch the wall oven circuit breaker OFF (double-pole 240V breaker).
  • Wait 60 seconds.
  • Switch the breaker ON.
  • Set the clock and reselect your bake, broil, or convection settings.
  • If the oven was running when power failed, confirm it stays OFF until you restart it.

What to check if the reset does not fix it

A reset helps with temporary electronic lockups. If the problem returns right away, focus on the symptom:

  • Oven will not heat: check for a failed heating circuit component (element, sensor, wiring).
  • Temperature is inaccurate: the oven temperature sensor is a common cause.
  • Display works but functions act “stuck”: control or keypad issues are likely.
  • Self-clean issues or door lock problems: the door lock motor can be involved.

Common parts that relate to “won’t heat” or “temp problems”

Symptom What it often points to Example part on this model page
Underheats or overheats Temperature sensing problem Range oven temperature sensor 316217002
No interior light (not a reset issue) Bulb or socket problem Range oven light bulb 316538904
Door stays locked after clean Door lock drive issue Motor 318261230

Why it matters

Resetting by cycling power is the fastest way to clear a control fault after a power failure. The manual also notes that after power resumes you should reset the clock and oven function; doing that prevents unexpected operation and gets the control back into a normal state.

Reference

For model-specific operating and safety guidance (including power failure behavior), use the PLEB30S9FCB owner's manual.

Last updated: February 2026

You have a Frigidaire electric wall oven; the model for this unit is PLEB30S9FCB. The most reliable way to confirm is to match the model number on your oven’s rating label to the model shown in the PLEB30S9FCB owner's manual.

How to confirm the model number on the oven

We recommend checking the rating label first, then comparing it to your paperwork.

  • Look for a rating label (model and serial tag) on the oven frame behind the door, along the side trim, or near the lower edge of the cavity.
  • Write down the full model number exactly as shown (letters and numbers matter).
  • Compare it to your purchase receipt or installation paperwork.
  • If the oven is built-in and hard to access, use the model number from your documents, then verify later when convenient.
  • Use the confirmed model number to select correct parts such as the range oven temperature sensor 316217002 or range oven light bulb 316538904.

What the model number tells you

The model number is what we use to match the correct parts diagrams, wiring, and installation requirements for your exact Frigidaire wall oven.

What you’re checking Why it matters Example for this oven
Model number Ensures parts fit and functions match PLEB30S9FCB
Serial number Identifies production run details Varies by unit
Product type Confirms you are using wall oven instructions Electric wall oven

Why it matters

Wall ovens often share similar styling across multiple model families, but internal components (temperature sensor, door lock motor, light socket, wiring harness) can differ. Using the exact model number prevents ordering the wrong part and avoids installation issues.

Last updated: February 2026

Most common symptoms to help you fix your wall oven

Choose a symptom to see related wall oven repairs.

Main causes: bad oven door lock assembly, faulty electronic control board, wiring failure…

Main causes: faulty oven temperature sensor, control system problem, weak burner igniter, damaged oven element…

Main causes: lack of gas supply, broken igniter, tripped circuit breaker, broken oven element, tripped thermal fuse, con…

Main causes: lack of electrical power, bad electronic control board, faulty oven control thermostat…

Main causes: broken broil element, faulty broil burner igniter, control system failure…

Main causes: broken bake element, bad bake burner igniter, tripped thermal switch, control system failure…

Most common repair guides to help fix your wall oven

These step-by-step repair guides will help you safely fix what’s broken on your wall oven.

How to replace the thermal switch in a wall oven

How to replace the thermal switch in a wall oven

If the oven won't heat after resetting the thermal switch, replace the thermal switch.…

Repair time and Difficulty

 60 minutes or less
How to replace a wall oven thermal fuse

How to replace a wall oven thermal fuse

The thermal fuse trips to prevent the over from excessively overheating. The oven won't heat again until you replace the…

Repair time and Difficulty

 60 minutes or less
How to replace a wall oven door outer glass panel

How to replace a wall oven door outer glass panel

Learn how to replace a damaged outer window panel on your wall oven door with these step-by-step instructions. …

Repair time and Difficulty

 45 minutes or less

Effective articles & videos to help repair your wall oven

Use the advice and tips in these articles and videos to get the most out of your wall oven.

How to remove grease from your oven

How to remove grease from your oven

Oven looking grimy? Discover how to clean a greasy oven using safe, effective methods like baking soda and more.…

How to read a wiring schematic video

How to read a wiring schematic video

Learn how to decipher symbols so you can buy the right part for your problem.…

How to correct an oven's temperature setting

How to correct an oven's temperature setting

If your oven consistently undercooks or overcooks, it might need recalibration. You can reset it yourself.…

Parts & More

Boating
Bottom-Mount Refrigerator
Digital Camcorder
Dryer
Front-Engine Lawn Tractor
Microwave/Hood Combo
Miter Saw
Others
Parts
Refrigerator
Rolling Tool Cart
Snow Blade
Television
Treadmill