Can I look up Frigidaire parts by model number?
Yes. Looking up parts by model number is the most accurate way to get compatible replacement parts for your Frigidaire gas range model FPGH3077RFA, because the parts list is filtered to the exact burner, oven, and control configurations used on that model.
How to find the model number on your range
Use the appliance data tag (model and serial label), then match the model number exactly, character for character.
Common places to check on a gas range:
- Inside the oven door frame or along the oven front frame
- On the lower drawer frame (storage or warming drawer area)
- Behind the control panel area (less common)
- On the back panel of the range
For model-specific documentation and labeling guidance, use the FPGH3077RFA owner’s manual.
How to use the model number to get the right part
Once you have FPGH3077RFA, use it to narrow results, then confirm the part by name and function (not just by appearance).
What to verify before ordering:
- The full model number (including any suffix letters)
- The part name and where it installs (cooktop, oven, door)
- Finish or color when applicable (stainless, black, matte)
- Gas type and conversion requirements (if you are changing fuel type)
- Symptoms you are fixing (no heat, uneven baking, burner won’t light)
Examples of model-matched parts for FPGH3077RFA
These are common part types customers replace on this model:
| Symptom | Part type to check | Example part for this model |
|---|---|---|
| Oven temperature seems off | Oven temperature sensor | Range oven temperature sensor 5304504897 |
| Oven won’t heat or heats inconsistently | Oven gas valve or burner | Oven gas valve (model-matched) |
| Burner flame is uneven | Burner cap or burner head | Burner cap or burner head (model-matched) |
Why it matters
Ranges often look similar across Frigidaire model families, but burner outputs, control boards, and oven components can differ. Using FPGH3077RFA prevents ordering a part that fits physically but does not match the electrical connectors, calibration, or gas flow.
Last updated: February 2026
Why is my Frigidaire gas oven not heating?
If your Frigidaire gas range model FPGH3077RFA isn’t heating, the most common causes are a failed hot-surface igniter, a gas supply issue, or a control/sensor problem. Start with safe basics (power, gas, settings), then test heat-related parts such as the igniter circuit and oven temperature sensor.
Safety first
- Turn oven controls OFF and let the oven cool before checking anything.
- Keep the range plugged into a properly grounded outlet; the igniter and controls need power.
- If you smell gas, stop and ventilate the area; do not keep trying to ignite.
For model-specific operating checks and “Before You Call” troubleshooting, use the FPGH3077RFA owner’s manual.
Quick checks that fix many “no heat” complaints
- Confirm the oven is set to Bake (not just the clock or timer).
- Verify the range has electrical power (electric ignition requires it).
- Make sure the gas shutoff valve is fully open.
- If you recently converted fuel types, confirm the range is correctly set up for the gas type (natural gas vs LP).
What to check next (most likely parts)
1) Igniter and burner ignition
A weak igniter can glow but still not draw enough current to open the gas valve, so the burner never lights.
2) Oven temperature sensing
If the oven heats erratically or won’t regulate temperature, a failed sensor can cause the control to stop heating. For this model, the correct sensor is the range oven temperature sensor 5304504897.
3) Gas valve and regulator
If the igniter is working but the burner never gets gas, the oven gas valve or regulator can be at fault. Gas valve replacement is a repair we recommend having a qualified technician perform.
Symptom-to-cause guide
| What you observe | Most likely cause | Good next step |
|---|---|---|
| No glow from igniter | No power, failed igniter, wiring/control issue | Check outlet and wiring; test igniter circuit |
| Igniter glows, no flame | Weak igniter or gas valve not opening | Test igniter draw; inspect gas supply |
| Flame lights then shuts off | Sensor/control issue | Check sensor and control connections |
| Surface burners OK, oven not | Oven ignition/valve circuit issue | Focus on igniter, valve, control |
Why it matters
A gas oven that does not heat is usually an ignition or control problem, not a “temperature setting” issue. Correct diagnosis prevents repeated ignition attempts, reduces downtime, and helps you replace only the part that actually failed.
Last updated: February 2026
How to manually light a Frigidaire gas oven?
On the Frigidaire FPGH3077RFA gas range, manual lighting is supported for the surface burners during a power outage; the oven bake burner is not designed for routine manual lighting. Follow the safety and operating steps in the FPGH3077RFA installation guide and use the cooktop method below.
Manual lighting steps (surface burners)
- Turn the surface burner knob to OFF and wait a moment for any unburned gas to clear.
- Hold a lit match or long lighter at the burner head.
- Slowly turn the surface control knob to LITE until the burner ignites.
- Once lit, turn the knob to the desired flame size (do not leave it on LITE).
- If it does not light within a few seconds, turn the knob OFF, ventilate, and try again.
What to do if you meant the oven (bake) burner
If the oven will not ignite but the cooktop works, the issue is usually in the oven ignition or temperature sensing circuit, not something you solve by manual lighting.
Common checks we recommend:
- Confirm the range has power (clock/display on) and the gas supply valve is open.
- Listen for normal ignition behavior when starting Bake.
- Inspect for loose wiring or heat damage (power off first).
- If baking temperatures are erratic, test/replace the range oven temperature sensor 5304504897.
Quick comparison
| What you want to light | Manual lighting recommended? | Typical next step if it will not light |
|---|---|---|
| Surface burner | Yes (during outage) | Clean/seat burner cap and head; retry lighting |
| Oven bake burner | No (not routine) | Diagnose igniter/valve/control circuit; service if needed |
Why it matters
Manual lighting is a safety workaround for a power outage on the cooktop. Trying to manually light the oven can allow gas to accumulate in the oven cavity, increasing the risk of a flare-up when ignition finally occurs.
Last updated: February 2026




