Does Frigidaire make a gas wall oven?
Yes. Frigidaire makes gas wall ovens, and the Frigidaire FGB24T3ECF is a gas wall oven model. Gas wall ovens still require a properly grounded electrical connection for the controls and ignition; follow the installation guide for safe hookup and venting requirements.
What “gas wall oven” means for this model
A gas wall oven like the FGB24T3ECF uses gas for heat, but it also relies on electricity for items like the electronic oven control and igniter.
- Gas supply must be connected with the correct shutoff valve and leak-check procedure
- Electrical grounding is required (3-prong grounded receptacle)
- The oven vent at the upper trim must stay unblocked for proper airflow
- Installation should be done by a qualified installer or service technician
Quick checklist before you shop or install
Use this list to confirm you are looking at the right fuel type and setup.
- Confirm the model number on the rating plate matches FGB24T3ECF
- Verify you have a manual gas shutoff valve accessible after installation
- Make sure the receptacle is a properly grounded 3-prong outlet
- Keep the upper-trim vent area clear (do not block it)
- If the oven will not heat after install, confirm the gas shutoff valve is open
Common gas wall oven components you may replace
If your gas wall oven will not ignite or heat consistently, these parts are commonly involved.
| Symptom | Common cause | Example part for FGB24T3ECF |
|---|---|---|
| No heat, no ignition | Weak or failed igniter | Frigidaire range oven burner igniter 5303935066 |
| Oven light out | Burned-out bulb or socket issue | Range oven light bulb 316538904 |
| Temperature seems off | Sensor drifting out of range | Kenmore range oven temperature sensor 316217005 |
Why it matters
Gas wall ovens combine gas and electrical systems. Correct grounding, leak checking (with a liquid leak detector, not a flame), and proper venting help the oven heat reliably and reduce nuisance ignition and control problems.
Last updated: February 2026
How to reset a Frigidaire wall oven?
To reset your Frigidaire FGB24T3ECF gas wall oven, do a power reset at the home electrical panel: turn the oven off, switch the wall oven circuit breaker OFF for 1 to 5 minutes, then switch it back ON and reset the clock. This clears many control glitches.
Power reset steps for model FGB24T3ECF
- Turn all oven controls to OFF.
- Go to your home electrical panel.
- Switch the wall oven circuit breaker OFF (this built-in oven is typically hardwired).
- Wait 1 to 5 minutes.
- Switch the breaker ON.
- Reset the clock and test Bake.
If an error code returns after the reset
A reset clears temporary faults; repeating codes point to a problem the control keeps detecting (sensor, wiring, ignition, or the electronic control).
Use the error-code chart and troubleshooting steps in the FGB24T3ECF owner's manual. If you want more detail on what specific codes mean, use the matching guide for your oven type: Frigidaire manual clean wall oven error codes.
What to check next (common after a reset)
| Symptom after reset | Most common cause | Next check |
|---|---|---|
| Display is on but oven will not heat | Ignition or gas supply issue | Gas shut-off valve open; igniter glow and burner ignition |
| Error returns immediately | Persistent fault detected | Code meaning; sensor circuit; harness connections |
| Oven light works but no bake | Control has power; heat circuit issue | Igniter, sensor, control outputs |
Why it matters
A proper breaker reset forces the control to restart its normal power-up sequence. If power resumes and the oven still will not operate, the control can display an error message and stop heating as a safety response.
Parts that commonly relate to “no heat” after a reset
- Frigidaire wall oven control board 316455461 (when errors persist or functions drop out)
- Frigidaire range oven burner igniter 5303935066 (weak igniter can prevent burner ignition)
- Gas supply shut-off valve (home supply)
- Wiring connections at the igniter and control
Last updated: February 2026
Why is my wall oven not turning on?
If your Frigidaire wall oven model FGB24T3ECF is not turning on, the most common causes are a tripped house breaker or blown fuse, the oven being left ON during a power failure, or the gas shut-off valve being closed. Start with the power supply checks, then confirm gas supply and control settings using the FGB24T3ECF owner's manual.
Quick checks we recommend first
- Reset the house circuit breaker fully OFF, then back ON (or replace the house fuse).
- If there was a power outage, turn the oven control/temperature knob to OFF, then retry.
- Confirm the gas supply shut-off valve is open (especially after installation or moving the oven).
- Make sure the controls are set correctly for Bake and temperature.
- If the oven was recently installed, verify the breaker is fully engaged and not half-tripped.
What to check next (in order)
1) Power supply and cord
A gas wall oven still needs electricity for the igniter and controls. If the outlet, cord, or breaker is the issue, the oven can appear completely dead.
2) Gas supply and ignition behavior
On this model, the glow bar igniter should heat and the burner should ignite in about a minute when you turn the oven on. If the oven has power but no heat, an igniter problem is a top suspect.
- If you smell gas, turn the oven OFF and shut off gas supply.
- If the igniter never glows, focus on electrical supply, wiring, and controls.
- If the igniter glows but the burner does not light reliably, replace the igniter.
Helpful part for this symptom: range oven burner igniter 5303935066.
Symptom-to-likely-cause guide
| What you notice | Most likely cause | What we do next |
|---|---|---|
| No lights, no response | House breaker/fuse, power interruption state | Reset breaker, set knob to OFF then retry |
| Control responds but no heat | Igniter not working, gas shut-off closed | Confirm gas valve open; check igniter glow |
| Worked before, now dead | Power supply issue or internal failure | Check breaker first; then inspect wiring and controls |
Why it matters
A “won’t turn on” wall oven can be a simple power supply issue, but it can also prevent the gas valves from operating correctly during ignition. Verifying power and gas supply first helps avoid unnecessary parts replacement and reduces safety risks.
Last updated: February 2026





