What type of device is the LREL6323S?
The LG LREL6323S is a freestanding electric range (single-oven) with a glass-ceramic cooktop and oven features that include convection and Air Fry. It’s designed to run on a 120/240V or 120/208V, 60 Hz single-phase electrical supply.
What this model includes
Based on the LREL6323S owner’s manual, this range is built around these core systems:
- Glass-ceramic cooktop with radiant surface elements (including dual elements and a warming zone)
- Single oven with Bake, Broil, Convection (LREL6323* models), Air Fry, and EasyClean®
- Self Clean feature (available on LREL6323* models)
- Control panel with settings such as Lockout and timed cooking
Electrical requirements (model-specific)
The LREL6323S requires a dedicated range circuit and is specified for either 120/240V or 120/208V, 60 Hz.
| Supply | Rated power (LREL6323*) | Typical connection |
|---|---|---|
| 120/240V | 13.1 kW | 3-wire or 4-wire range cord/conduit |
| 120/208V | 9.8 kW | 3-wire or 4-wire range cord/conduit |
Why it matters
Knowing this is an electric range (not gas) helps you choose the right replacement parts (like a bake element, radiant element, or temperature sensor) and confirms your home wiring and breaker size need to match the range’s electrical requirements.
Last updated: January 2026
Why is my LG electric oven not working?
If your LG LREL6323S electric oven isn’t working, the most common causes are a power supply problem (tripped breaker or loose cord), the oven being in Lockout, or a failed heating or control component such as the bake element, oven control board, or temperature sensor. Use the steps below to narrow it down safely.
Quick checks first (no tools)
- Confirm the range has power: check the house breaker(s) for the 240V circuit and reset if tripped.
- Make sure the oven controls are set correctly for Bake and you pressed Start (see LREL6323S owner’s manual).
- If the display shows a lock indicator or Loc, turn off Lockout by pressing and holding Clear/Off for 3 seconds.
- If the oven just ran Self Clean and the door is locked, let it cool; the oven won’t heat until it drops below the lock temperature.
- If the clock is flashing, reset the time; a power interruption can cause odd control behavior.
What to do if the oven has power but won’t heat
On the LG LREL6323S, a no-heat condition is usually caused by one of these parts:
- Bake element: if it’s open or damaged, Bake won’t heat properly.
- Oven temperature sensor: if it reads wrong, the control may not energize heat correctly.
- Oven control board: if relays fail, the oven may not heat even though the display works.
If you’re seeing an error code (F-code) and beeping, clear it with Clear/Off; if it returns, troubleshooting typically points to the control or keypad circuit.
| Symptom | Most likely direction | Common next step |
|---|---|---|
| Display works, oven won’t heat | Heating circuit issue | Inspect/ohm test bake element and sensor |
| Oven heats inconsistently | Sensor or control calibration | Check sensor, then temperature adjustment |
| Beeping with F-code | Control/keypad fault | Record code, then diagnose control circuit |
Parts that commonly fix “oven not working” on this model
- Range bake element MEE62306405
- Range oven temperature sensor EBG61305805
- LG range oven control board AGM30025901
Why it matters
An electric range can appear “dead” from a simple setting like Lockout, but a true no-heat problem often traces to the bake element, sensor feedback, or the electronic control board. Checking the easy items first prevents unnecessary parts replacement.
Last updated: January 2026
How to reset an LG electric stove?
To reset your LG electric range model LREL6323S, do a simple power reset: turn the range off, shut off power at the circuit breaker (or unplug it if accessible), wait 1 to 3 minutes, then restore power and reset the clock. See the LREL6323S owner’s manual for control-panel details.
Quick reset steps (recommended)
- Press Clear/Off to stop any active cooking cycle.
- Turn OFF the range’s breaker (or unplug the cord if you can safely reach it).
- Wait 1 to 3 minutes to let the control board fully discharge.
- Turn the breaker ON (or plug back in).
- Set the clock; a flashing time usually indicates a recent power interruption.
If the controls still do not respond
On LREL6323S, a “reset” may also mean clearing a locked control panel.
- Press and hold Clear/Off for 3 seconds to toggle Lockout off.
- If an F-code returns after the reset, write it down and try Clear/Off once.
- If the oven temperature seems inaccurate after a reset, check calibration settings in the manual.
What a reset can and cannot fix
| Situation | Reset helps? | What to check next |
|---|---|---|
| Display frozen or unresponsive | Yes | Lockout, power supply |
| Flashing clock after outage | Yes | Set clock |
| Oven not heating | Sometimes | Heating circuit, sensor |
| Repeated error codes | Sometimes | Diagnose the code, inspect parts |
Parts that can be involved (when symptoms persist)
If the range repeatedly loses temperature control or throws temperature-related errors, these model-compatible parts are commonly involved:
- Range oven temperature sensor EBG61305805 (monitors oven temperature)
- Control board or display board issues can also cause “won’t respond” symptoms
Why it matters
A proper reset clears temporary control glitches after a power surge or interruption and helps you confirm whether the issue is electrical/control-related versus a failed component (like a sensor or control board).
Last updated: January 2026
Is LG a good brand for electric ranges?
Yes. For the LG LREL6323S electric range, LG is widely considered a strong brand choice because it tends to score well for owner satisfaction and reliability in independent brand comparisons, and it offers features and support typical of a premium smoothtop range. For model-specific operation and care details, use the LREL6323S owner’s manual.
What “good brand” means for an electric range
When we evaluate electric range brands, we focus on the things that affect day-to-day cooking and long-term ownership:
- Consistent baking and broiling performance (temperature control, preheat behavior)
- Cooktop performance and durability (glass-ceramic care, element cycling)
- Parts support and serviceability over time
- Useful features (convection, self-clean/EasyClean®, control lockout)
- Owner satisfaction (noise, usability, cleaning experience)
What we can confirm for LG LREL6323S
Based on the model family information in the manual text for LREL6323*:
- It is a 30-inch class electric single oven range with a 6.3 cu. ft. oven capacity
- It supports convection cooking (LREL6323* models)
- It includes EasyClean® and Self Clean (LREL6323* models)
- It uses a glass-ceramic cooktop with cycling radiant elements (normal operation)
Quick comparison: what to look for when choosing a brand
| What you care about | What to check on any range | Where to confirm it on this model |
|---|---|---|
| Even baking | Convection options, rack guidance | LREL6323S owner’s manual |
| Easy cleanup | EasyClean® vs self-clean, cooktop cleaning steps | LREL6323S owner’s manual |
| Repairability | Common wear parts and electronics availability | Parts list for LREL6323S |
Why it matters
A “good” electric range is one that holds temperature well, is easy to keep clean, and can be repaired economically if a heating or control component fails. Brand reputation helps, but correct installation, cookware choice, and routine maintenance often matter just as much.
Last updated: January 2026
How to find LG part number?
For LG electric range model LREL6323S, the most reliable way to find the correct part number is to match your model number and then confirm the part number printed on the original component label (when accessible). We recommend using the model-specific parts breakdown in the LREL6323S owner’s manual to identify the component name and location before ordering.
Where to look for the part number on an LG range
Many LG range parts have a sticker, stamp, or printed label on the part itself. Common places to check:
- Behind the rear access panel (control boards, wiring connections)
- Under the cooktop (surface element switches, radiant elements)
- Inside the oven cavity (temperature sensor, bake element mounting area)
- On the door assembly (door switch, hinges, glass panels)
- On the frame near the storage drawer opening (some harness routing and IDs)
Best method: match by model, then verify by the part label
If you can safely access the part, the label on the component is the best confirmation because manufacturers sometimes revise parts during production.
- Step 1: Confirm your appliance model is LREL6323S (from the model/serial tag on the range).
- Step 2: Identify the failed component by function and location (manual diagrams help).
- Step 3: Compare the number on the part label to the compatible replacement listing.
Example (common range part)
If you are diagnosing inaccurate oven temperatures, the compatible sensor for this model is the range oven temperature sensor EBG61305805.
Quick reference: model number vs part number
| Item | What it identifies | Where you’ll see it |
|---|---|---|
| Model number (LREL6323S) | The full appliance | Model/serial tag on the range |
| Part number / part ID | The specific replacement component | On the part label and in parts listings |
| Revision code (if present) | Version of the part | Often on the part label |
Why it matters
Using the exact part number (or confirming compatibility by model) helps prevent ordering a look-alike part that mounts differently, has different wiring terminals, or is calibrated differently.
Last updated: January 2026
Does a LG LREL6323S have a thermostat?
Yes. The LG LREL6323S electric range uses temperature-sensing and temperature-limiting components to control and protect oven temperatures, including an oven temperature sensor and a safety thermostat (often called a high-limit thermostat). See the LREL6323S owner’s manual for operating and temperature-adjustment details.
What “thermostat” means on this model
On modern LG electric ranges like the LREL6323S, “thermostat” can refer to more than one part:
- Oven temperature sensor: tells the control board the oven temperature so it can cycle the bake/broil elements.
- Safety thermostat (high-limit): helps prevent overheating by opening if temperatures get unsafe.
- Electronic control: the control board uses sensor feedback to regulate heat rather than a simple mechanical thermostat.
Parts commonly involved in oven temperature control
If you are troubleshooting inaccurate oven temps, preheat issues, or overheating, these model-compatible parts are the usual suspects:
- Range oven temperature sensor EBG61305805
- Range safety thermostat 6930W1A003X
- Bake element and broil element (heat sources)
Quick comparison
| Component | What it does | Common symptom when failing |
|---|---|---|
| Oven temperature sensor | Measures oven temperature for the control | Oven too hot/too cold, erratic temps |
| Safety thermostat | Trips if overheating occurs | Oven shuts off, won’t heat, intermittent heating |
| Control board | Cycles elements based on sensor input | No heat, wrong temps, error codes |
Why it matters
Accurate temperature control affects baking results, preheat time, and safe operation. If the sensor is out of range or the safety thermostat is tripping, the oven may undercook, overcook, or stop heating unexpectedly.
Helpful checks before replacing parts
- Confirm the oven is not in a special mode (Timed Cook, Sabbath, etc.).
- Compare set temperature vs. actual using an oven thermometer (expect some cycling swings).
- If you suspect calibration, use the oven temperature adjustment steps in the LREL6323S owner’s manual.
- If the oven won’t heat at all, inspect wiring connections and look for signs of overheating at terminals.
Last updated: January 2026
What is the life expectancy of a LG oven?
LG ovens, including the LG LREL6323S electric range, typically last 12 to 15 years with normal household use. How long yours lasts depends most on heat exposure to electronics, cleaning habits, and keeping the oven calibrated and maintained using the LREL6323S owner’s manual.
What affects lifespan the most
- Frequent high-heat cleaning (Self Clean) that stresses door locks, wiring, and controls
- Grease buildup and blocked venting that trap heat around the control area
- Power surges or repeated outages that strain the display board and control board
- A worn door gasket that leaks heat and forces longer heating cycles
- Ignoring early symptoms like temperature drift or slow preheat
Practical ways to help your LREL6323S reach 12 to 15 years
- Use EasyClean® for light soils; reserve Self Clean for heavy buildup.
- Keep the oven vent area clear; wipe spills promptly once cool.
- Don’t line the oven bottom with foil; use a sheet pan on a lower rack to catch drips.
- If baking temperatures seem off, use the oven temperature adjustment steps in the manual.
- Address weak heating or sensing early so the oven doesn’t run longer and hotter than necessary.
Common wear-out parts (examples for this model)
| Part | What you’ll notice when it’s failing | Example compatible part |
|---|---|---|
| Oven temperature sensor | Oven runs hot/cold, uneven baking | Range oven temperature sensor EBG61305805 |
| Bake element | Slow preheat, no heat in Bake | Range bake element MEE62306405 |
| Display board | Dead display, erratic operation | LG range display board EBR89296403 |
Why it matters
Knowing the typical 12 to 15-year life expectancy helps you decide whether a repair makes sense. On a modern LG electric range like the LREL6323S, fixing heating or sensing problems early often prevents extra stress on the control system.
Last updated: January 2026




