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Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA electric oven Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA electric oven, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA electric oven
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Browse Parts for PLEB30T8CCA Wall Ovens

  • Insulation for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 807090301

    Insulation

    Part #318133769

    Replaced by #807090301

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  • Range Washer for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 316008401

    Spacer

    Part #5303322885

    Replaced by #316008401

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  • Range Convection Fan Blade Nut for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 316136600

    Nut

    Part #5303311205

    Replaced by #316136600

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  • Range Oven Door Lock Switch for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 318394803

    Oven Switch

    Part #318089913

    Replaced by #318394803

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  • Range Rear Panel for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 318066415

    Main

    Part #318066402

    Replaced by #318066415

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  • Wall Oven Door Lock Assembly for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 318095956

    Motor

    Part #318095934

    Replaced by #318095956

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  • Cooking Appliance Spacer for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 318531702

    Lower oven diagram

    Spacer

    Part #08007817

    Replaced by #318531702

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  • Range Spacer for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 318531800

    Oven Spacer

    Part #318014700

    Replaced by #318531800

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  • Frigidaire Range Bake Element for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 318255006

    Oven Bake Element

    Part #5303310512

    Replaced by #318255006

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  • Range Oven Insulation for Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA - Part 318594302

    Insulation

    Part #318133744

    Replaced by #318594302

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Frigidaire Electric Oven PLEB30T8CCA FAQs

The best electric wall oven to buy is the one that fits your cabinet cutout, cooking needs, and serviceability. If you already own a Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA, the most cost-effective “best” choice is often keeping it running with the right replacement parts and accurate temperature control.

How we recommend choosing the “best” wall oven
  • Fit first: confirm 30-inch class, single vs. double oven, and cabinet cutout requirements.
  • Cooking performance: look for even baking, convection options, and stable temperature control.
  • Controls and features: simple knobs vs. touch controls, timers, self-clean, and probe support.
  • Reliability and parts availability: common wear parts should be easy to source.
  • Total cost: purchase price plus installation, electrical work, and long-term repairs.
If you are comparing new ovens: quick feature checklist
What to compare What “good” looks like Why it matters
Oven type Single or double wall oven Impacts capacity and cabinet fit
Convection True convection (fan plus heating element) More even browning and faster roasting
Self-clean Self-clean or steam-clean options Reduces manual scrubbing
Controls Clear display, responsive buttons Fewer usability headaches
Serviceability Replaceable sensor, control, elements Lower repair cost over time
When repairing your current PLEB30T8CCA is the better move

If your oven is not heating evenly, takes too long to preheat, or seems to run hot or cold, repairs often restore performance without the cost of a new install.

Common fixes we see on electric wall ovens:

Why it matters

Wall ovens are tightly matched to cabinet dimensions and electrical supply. Choosing based on fit and long-term serviceability prevents expensive rework, and keeping a proven unit like the Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA running can deliver the best value.

Last updated: January 2026

Yes. Several manufacturers make 36-inch electric wall ovens, but your Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA is a 30-inch wall oven model, so a 36-inch unit is a different appliance size and typically requires a different cabinet cutout, electrical hookup, and trim fit.

What to check before buying a 36-inch electric wall oven

A 36-inch wall oven is not a simple swap for a 30-inch oven. We recommend confirming these items first:

  • Cabinet cutout size (height, width, depth) and whether the opening can be safely modified
  • Electrical requirements (voltage and breaker size); many wall ovens use 240V and a dedicated circuit
  • Single vs. double oven configuration and overall height
  • Ventilation and clearance requirements around the oven
  • Trim and door swing clearance with adjacent cabinets and countertops
How this relates to your PLEB30T8CCA

If you are replacing the PLEB30T8CCA because of performance issues (not because you want a larger oven), it is often more cost-effective to repair common heating or control problems first.

Common repair paths on this model include:

Quick size comparison (typical)
Oven size class Typical cabinet cutout width Typical use case
30-inch wall oven About 28 1/2 to 29 1/2 inches Most standard wall-oven installations
36-inch wall oven About 33 1/2 to 34 1/2 inches Larger capacity, wider pans, premium installs
Why it matters

Wall ovens are built to fit specific cabinet cutouts and electrical specs. Moving from a 30-inch Frigidaire wall oven to a 36-inch electric wall oven usually means cabinetry changes and careful planning to avoid fit, clearance, or power issues.

Last updated: January 2026

To clear an error code on your Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA electric wall oven, we reset the control by turning power off at the breaker for 1 to 5 minutes, then restoring power. If the code returns right away, the oven is detecting an active problem that needs troubleshooting.

Quick reset steps (most common)
  • Turn the oven off.
  • Switch the oven circuit breaker OFF (or remove the fuse) for 1 to 5 minutes.
  • Switch the breaker ON.
  • Set the clock, then try Bake and Broil.
  • If the code reappears, write it down before doing anything else.
If the code comes back: what to check next

Many Frigidaire wall oven codes relate to temperature sensing, heating, or control communication. These checks help narrow it down:

  • Power supply: Make sure the breaker is fully seated (OFF then ON) and the oven has steady power.
  • Overheating or runaway temp symptoms: If temps seem wrong, the temperature sensor is a common suspect.
  • No heat or weak heat: A failed bake circuit can trigger faults; inspect the bake element circuit.
  • Control issues: If the display is erratic or buttons do not respond, the electronic control can be involved.
Common parts tied to recurring error codes (by symptom)
Symptom after reset Likely area Example part for PLEB30T8CCA
Oven temperature seems inaccurate Temperature sensing Sensor probe 316217002
Oven will not heat in Bake Heating circuit Oven bake element 318255006
Random beeping, blank/garbled display Electronic control Range oven control board 318022001
Why it matters

Clearing the code gets you back to cooking quickly, but a code that returns immediately is the oven protecting itself. Addressing the underlying issue helps prevent no-heat failures, overheating, and repeat shutdowns.

Helpful reference

For interpreting Frigidaire-style fault codes and what they typically point to, use our Frigidaire self-cleaning range error codes guide as a starting point (many control systems share similar code families).

Last updated: January 2026

Frigidaire wall ovens are a solid choice for most kitchens because they typically deliver even baking, reliable temperature control, and practical features like convection. For the Frigidaire PLEB30T8CCA electric wall oven, overall performance depends most on proper installation, stable power supply, and keeping key heating and sensing parts in good condition.

What “good” usually means for a wall oven

When customers ask if a wall oven is “any good,” we focus on the things that affect day-to-day cooking results:

  • Temperature accuracy (bakes and roasts match the set temperature)
  • Even heating (fewer hot spots, more consistent browning)
  • Preheat time (reasonable time to reach 350°F)
  • Control reliability (buttons and display respond consistently)
  • Serviceability (common wear parts are replaceable)
Parts that most affect cooking performance on PLEB30T8CCA

If baking is uneven, preheat is slow, or temperatures seem off, these parts are the first places we look:

Quick symptom-to-part guide
Symptom Most likely area to check Common next step
Food browns unevenly Convection airflow, rack position Verify fan runs; adjust rack placement
Oven temperature seems wrong Temperature sensing Test/replace sensor probe
No bake heat Heating circuit Inspect/replace bake element
Random beeping or dead display Controls/power Check power; inspect control board
Why it matters

A wall oven can be “good” on day one but cook poorly if it cannot sense temperature correctly or if the bake element is weak. Keeping the heating system (element), sensing system (probe), and controls (board) working together is what protects baking results and prevents repeat temperature swings.

Last updated: January 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.…

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