Is PGS930YP7FS covered under warranty?
Warranty coverage for your GE slide-in gas range model PGS930YP7FS depends on the specific warranty terms and the purchase date; most ranges include a limited warranty (often 1 year) with longer coverage on certain components in some plans. Check your warranty paperwork and match it to your model and serial number.
What we can confirm for PGS930YP7FS
We do not treat warranty as a parts compatibility issue; you can still identify and replace common service parts for this model from the parts list, such as the range oven temperature sensor WB24X25557 or range spark module WB13X24741.
How to check your warranty quickly
- Find your proof of purchase (receipt, invoice, delivery confirmation).
- Locate the model and serial tag on the range and confirm it reads PGS930YP7FS.
- Review the warranty document for:
- Coverage length (full and limited)
- What parts are included or excluded
- Labor coverage vs. parts-only coverage
- Requirements for proper installation and gas supply
- If you have an extended plan, compare its start date to the original purchase date.
Common scenarios and what they mean
| Situation | What it usually means | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| Range is less than 12 months old | Typically within the standard limited warranty | Use your warranty paperwork to confirm covered parts and labor |
| Range is older than 1 year | Standard warranty is typically expired | Price out repair parts and plan a DIY or technician repair |
| Issue is ignition or burner lighting | Often a wear-related repair | Check igniters, spark module, and burner components |
| Temperature seems inaccurate | Often sensor or control related | Consider testing/replacing the oven temperature sensor |
Why it matters
Warranty status changes the best repair path: if you are covered, you will want to follow the warranty terms; if you are not, ordering the correct replacement parts for model PGS930YP7FS helps you fix heating, ignition, and burner issues without guesswork.
Last updated: February 2026
Is it worth repairing a gas range?
Yes, repairing a GE slide-in gas range like model PGS930YP7FS is usually worth it when the problem is isolated (ignition, temperature sensing, a single burner) and the repair cost stays well below the price of a comparable replacement range.
Quick rule of thumb we use
A repair is the better value when:
- The range is under about 10 years old
- The issue is limited to one system (surface ignition, oven ignition, temperature control)
- The fix is a common part replacement (igniter, sensor, spark module, valve)
- The range has been reliable overall
- You want to avoid the cost and hassle of replacing and reinstalling a slide-in unit
Replacement makes more sense when:
- The range is 15+ years old
- Multiple failures are happening (burners plus oven plus controls)
- You smell gas, see damaged wiring, or the repair involves major gas train work
- The repair estimate approaches about half the cost of a new comparable range
Common “worth repairing” failures on PGS930YP7FS
These are typical, targeted repairs that often restore normal operation:
- Oven will not heat or takes too long to ignite: replace the range oven burner igniter WB13X40206
- Broil will not ignite: replace the range broil igniter WB13X40207
- Oven temperature is inaccurate: replace the range oven temperature sensor WB24X25557
- Burners click but do not light consistently: replace the range spark module WB13X24741
- One surface burner will not adjust or is stuck: replace the range surface burner valve WB21X20612
Cost and complexity comparison
| Repair type | Typical difficulty | Typical outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Igniter or temperature sensor | Medium DIY | Restores heat and stabilizes baking temps |
| Spark module | Medium DIY | Restores reliable surface ignition |
| Gas valve/regulator work | Advanced | Fixes gas flow issues but needs careful leak checks |
Why it matters
A slide-in gas range is expensive to replace and can require fit checks, leveling, and gas connection work. When the failure is a single component (like an igniter or sensor), replacing that part is usually the fastest path back to safe, consistent cooking performance.
Last updated: February 2026
What does F7 error mean?
On the GE PGS930YP7FS slide-in gas range, the F7 error means the control is detecting a shorted or “stuck” keypad (touch panel) input. In plain terms, the range thinks a key is being pressed continuously, so it may beep, lock out functions, or stop the oven.
What to do first (safe, quick checks)
- Cancel the error, then turn off power at the breaker for 1 minute and restore power.
- Clean and dry the control area; moisture or cleaner residue can trigger false key signals.
- Make sure nothing is pressing on the control panel (misaligned trim, heavy object leaning on the panel).
- If the code returns immediately after power is restored, treat it as an active keypad short.
What usually causes F7
F7 is a keypad circuit fault, not a burner or temperature-sensor issue. Common causes include:
- Moisture intrusion into the touch panel
- A failing touch panel/keypad that is electrically shorted
- A loose, pinched, or damaged connector/wire in the control harness
- A failing electronic control that is misreading keypad signals
Parts to consider on this model
If basic checks do not stop the F7 error, the repair typically focuses on the control electronics and wiring.
| Suspect area | What it does | Typical symptom |
|---|---|---|
| Wiring harness | Carries keypad signals | F7 comes and goes when the range is moved |
| Main control board | Interprets keypad inputs | F7 returns quickly, other odd beeping or unresponsive keys |
Model-matched parts that relate to these areas include the main harness WB18X28898 and the machine control rc17 and relay with fram WB27X44158. For wiring repair basics, use how to repair broken or damaged wires video.
Why it matters
A shorted keypad signal can disable baking or broiling and can cause constant beeping. Fixing the keypad circuit restores reliable oven operation and prevents repeat shutdowns.
Last updated: February 2026
What is PGS930YP7FS?
PGS930YP7FS is a GE slide-in gas range model number. It identifies the exact configuration of your 30-inch range so you can match the correct replacement parts (like igniters, burner caps, and control boards) and troubleshoot symptoms accurately.
What this model number tells you
For GE ranges, the model number is the key to getting parts that fit and function correctly.
- Confirms you have a GE slide-in gas range (not a freestanding or electric model)
- Ensures you match the correct burner components (cap, base, valve, orifice holder)
- Helps you select the right oven ignition parts for bake and broil
- Narrows down compatible electronic controls and sensors
- Prevents ordering look-alike parts that do not mount or wire the same
Common parts customers replace on PGS930YP7FS
These are examples of parts available for this model that often come up during repairs:
- Range oven burner igniter WB13X40206
- Range broil igniter WB13X40207
- Range surface burner cap WB28K10222
- Range oven temperature sensor WB24X25557
- Range spark module WB13X24741
Quick guide: which part relates to which symptom
| Symptom | Most likely area | Example part for PGS930YP7FS |
|---|---|---|
| Oven will not heat (bake) | Bake ignition | Range Oven Burner Igniter (WB13X40206) |
| Broil will not light | Broil ignition | Range Broil Igniter (WB13X40207) |
| Burner flame is uneven | Burner cap/base | Range Surface Burner Cap (WB28K10222) |
| Oven temp is off | Temperature sensing | Range Oven Temperature Sensor (WB24X25557) |
| Clicking or no spark at burners | Spark system | Range Spark Module (WB13X24741) |
Why it matters
Using the exact model number PGS930YP7FS keeps your repair accurate. GE ranges can share similar styling across model families, but internal parts like igniters, sensor boards, and gas valves can differ by revision.
Last updated: February 2026




