What is the F2 code on a Jenn Air wall oven?
On the Jenn-Air W256 electric wall oven, the F2 error code means the oven temperature is too hot (an over-temperature condition). The most common fixes are checking the oven temperature sensor circuit and replacing the sensor if it is out of range or damaged.
- Cancel the cycle and let the oven cool completely.
- Turn off power at the breaker for 1 minute, then restore power to reset the control.
- If F2 returns, inspect the sensor wiring harness for loose connections, pinched wires, or heat damage.
- If the oven overheats during bake or broil, suspect a failed sensor or a stuck heating relay on the control.
- If the broil element stays on too long or seems uncontrolled, inspect the broil circuit and element connections.
| Likely cause | What you may notice | Typical fix |
|---|---|---|
| Oven temperature sensor reading wrong | Overheats, erratic temps, F2 after preheat | Replace oven sensor 12001656 |
| Control relay stuck closed (sending constant heat) | Heat continues after cancel/off, runaway temperature | Replace the electronic control (clock/control board) |
| Wiring/connectors problem | Intermittent F2, happens after moving/cleaning | Repair harness/terminals |
An F2 over-temperature condition can cause poor baking results, repeated shutdowns, and can over-stress components like the bake element and broiler element. Fixing the sensor or control issue restores normal temperature regulation.
- The oven keeps heating after you cancel or after you turn the oven off.
- You smell burning insulation or see damaged wiring.
- The code returns immediately after a reset and cooling.
Last updated: February 2026
Why is my Jennair wall oven not turning on?
If your Jenn-Air W256 electric wall oven won’t turn on, the most common causes are a tripped breaker, a loose or burned power connection, or a failed control or safety component that prevents the oven from powering up. Start with the power supply checks first, then move to internal parts.
- Reset the wall oven’s circuit breaker fully (OFF, then ON). Many wall ovens use a 240V double-pole breaker.
- Check for a GFCI outlet or upstream breaker that may have tripped (less common for hardwired ovens).
- If the display is blank, verify the home has power and other 240V appliances work.
- If the breaker trips again, stop and have the circuit inspected before continuing.
- If the display is on but the oven will not heat, confirm the clock is set and no control lock is enabled.
- If the oven is hardwired, inspect the junction box connections for overheating (power OFF first).
- Look for signs of a door not fully closing; some models will not heat if the door switch circuit is open.
If power is present but the oven stays off or won’t heat, these parts are common suspects:
- Temperature sensor out of range (can prevent normal operation): oven sensor 12001656
- Failed heating circuit (bake or broil element open): bake element WPY04100020, broiler element WPY04100514
- Damaged door gasket causing heat loss and long preheat (usually not a total no-power issue): oven seal WP701650
| What you observe | Most likely direction | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| No display, no lights | Power supply issue | Reset breaker; check junction box wiring |
| Display works, no heat | Heating circuit or sensor | Test elements and sensor with a multimeter |
| Breaker trips when starting | Shorted wiring or element | Disconnect element leads and re-test circuit |
A wall oven that “won’t turn on” is often a power delivery problem, but when power is confirmed, testing the bake/broil circuits and the oven temperature sensor helps you avoid replacing the wrong part and reduces repeat failures.
Last updated: February 2026
How to reset jenn air wall oven?
To reset a Jenn-Air wall oven like model W256, we power-cycle it at the breaker: turn the oven circuit breaker(s) OFF for 1 minute, then turn them ON, start a Bake cycle, and watch for about 1 minute to confirm the error does not return.
- Turn OFF the wall oven circuit breaker(s) in your home electrical panel.
- Wait 60 seconds.
- Turn the breaker(s) ON.
- Set the oven to Bake and start the cycle.
- Monitor the display for about 1 minute.
- If an error code returns, cancel the cycle and continue with the checks below.
A reset clears many temporary control glitches, but repeated errors usually point to a heat-sensing or heating issue.
- If the oven heats unevenly or will not reach temperature, check the temperature sensor circuit; a failed sensor is a common cause.
- If Bake will not heat but Broil works, the bake heater is a likely suspect.
- If Broil will not heat but Bake works, the broil heater is a likely suspect.
- If the door does not seal well (heat loss, long preheat), inspect the door gasket.
| Symptom | Most common check | Example part for W256 |
|---|---|---|
| Oven temperature seems wrong | Temperature sensor | Oven sensor 12001656 |
| No heat on Bake | Bake heater | Bake element WPY04100020 |
| No heat on Broil | Broil heater | Broiler element WPY04100514 |
| Heat leaking around door | Door gasket | Oven seal WP701650 |
A proper reset helps you quickly rule out a one-time control fault. If the issue repeats after a breaker reset, focusing on the oven sensor, bake element, broiler element, or oven seal helps you move from “resetting” to a lasting repair.
Last updated: February 2026
How to calibrate a Jenn Air wall oven?
To calibrate the oven temperature on your Jenn-Air W256 wall oven, we adjust the control’s bake temperature offset so the oven runs slightly hotter or cooler. This corrects consistent overbaking or underbaking without changing your recipe settings.
- Confirm the issue is consistent (for example, always 25°F too hot, not random swings).
- Use an oven thermometer placed in the center of the rack.
- Preheat fully; most ovens need 20 to 30 minutes to stabilize.
- Check with at least 2 bake cycles and average the readings.
- Avoid opening the door during the test; heat loss skews results.
Many Jenn-Air wall ovens use a bake offset feature similar to this:
- Press Bake (or Upper Bake on double-oven controls).
- Set a high test temperature (commonly 500°F to 550°F).
- Press and hold Bake for about 5 seconds until an offset or calibration value appears.
- Use the AutoSet or arrow pads to raise or lower the offset.
- Stop pressing keys for about 5 seconds to save.
If your W256 control labels differ, use the same goal: find the bake “offset” or “calibration” setting and adjust it in small increments.
Use your average error to choose an offset.
| What you observe | What to set | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Oven is 20°F low | +20°F offset | Hotter baking |
| Oven is 15°F high | -15°F offset | Cooler baking |
| Temps vary widely | Do not offset yet | Troubleshoot heating/control |
Calibration helps steady, repeatable errors. If temperatures swing or preheat is slow, check common causes:
- Weak or damaged bake element WPY04100020
- Broil element not assisting preheat properly (on some designs) via broiler element WPY04100514
- Faulty oven sensor 12001656
- Door heat leak from a worn oven seal WP701650
Correct calibration improves baking accuracy, reduces overbrowning, and helps the oven cycle normally. It also prevents masking a real failure (like a failing bake element or sensor) with an oversized offset.
Last updated: February 2026





