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Frigidaire Appliance Repair in South Carolina

Frigidaire appliance repair across South Carolina. Independent specialist service for refrigerators, ranges, wall ovens, cooktops, freezers, dishwashers, washers and dryers — standard 24-48 hour response.

Coverage Statewide Response Same-day available Services 12 appliance types

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Frigidaire appliance repair in South Carolina.

From a FFTR top-freezer refrigerator to a FCRE smoothtop range, Frigidaire owners across South Carolina rely on us to keep their kitchen and laundry running. We are the go-to provider of frigidaire repair South Carolina, covering communities and neighborhoods across South Carolina. Working across South Carolina, our technicians cover FFTR/FRFG/FFSS refrigerators, FCRE/FFGF ranges, FFEW/FFET wall ovens, FFEC/FFGC/FFIC cooktops, FFFU/FFFC freezers, FFID dishwashers, FFTW/FFFW washers and FFRE/FFRG dryers.

Frigidaire Repair South Carolina — Frigidaire appliance repair

Why the South Carolina climate shapes Frigidaire repair South Carolina

South Carolina pairs a humid Lowcountry coast with hot, sticky inland summers. Salt air at Charleston and the coast works on stainless trim, while sustained humidity statewide keeps FFGF gas igniter ports damp toward continuous clicking. The Charleston, Columbia and Greenville areas run plenty of Frigidaire kitchens with FCRE ranges and FFID dishwashers, so we focus on corrosion control, igniter work and dishwasher service along the coast and inland.

Frigidaire appliances we service in South Carolina

Each Frigidaire line — refrigeration, cooking, dishwashing, laundry and ice — is fully within our service scope:

  • Refrigerators — FFTR top-freezer, FRFG French-door and FFSS side-by-side refrigerators with CrispSeal crispers, EvenTemp cooling and the PureSource water filter — read mostly by symptom, with the PF power-failure alert and display alerts like dF (defrost), SY EF (evaporator fan) and SY CE (communication) the consumer-facing signals
  • Ranges — freestanding Frigidaire ranges in electric (FCRE) and sealed-burner gas (FFGF) with Air Fry and Steam Clean self-clean — serviced from the oven F-code set (F10, F30, F90) and from ignition symptoms on the sealed gas burners, which carry no code
  • Wall Ovens — FFEW single and FFET double electric wall ovens with the electronic controls, True Convection and adjustable self-clean — read from the same F-code scheme as the ranges, with F30/F31 sensor and F90 door-lock faults the common calls
  • Cooktops — FFEC radiant, FFGC sealed-gas and FFIC induction cooktops with SpaceWise expandable elements or Quick Boil — serviced largely by symptom, since a gas burner that will not light or a radiant element that will not heat carries no consumer code (induction models may show E1/E6 or a 5F lockout)
  • Dishwashers — FFID, FGID and GDPH built-in dishwashers with the dishwasher filter and OrbitClean spray arm, the third rack and NSF Sanitize — reading genuine “i” codes (i10 low or no fill, i20/i40/iF0 drain restriction, i30 leak/float, iC0 communication), shown on the display or LED indicators
  • Washers — Frigidaire FFTW and FFFW washers — front-load models serviced from the E-code mapping (E11/E13 fill, E21/E23 drain, E41-E43 door lock, EF1/EF2 filter/suds) shown on the display; top-load units are largely symptom-led
  • Dryers — FFRE electric and FFRG gas dryers with DrySense moisture sensing, Anti-Wrinkle and Quick Dry — electronic-display models read E-codes (E64/E66), while a clogged vent that leaves clothes damp is the classic symptom we clear
  • Freezers — FFFU upright and FFFC chest freezers with Frost-Free operation, SpaceWise shelving and a door-ajar alarm — dial or simple-control units, so every not-freezing, frost or running-constantly fault is diagnosed by symptom
  • Ice Makers — EFIC countertop/portable and FGIC undercounter ice makers with clear-ice production and a self-cleaning cycle — diagnosed by symptom (no ice, slow ice, leaking, fill-valve faults) since the residential units carry no consumer fault display
  • Ice Machines — Frigidaire residential ice making — the 15-inch FGIC undercounter unit and EFIC countertop ice makers — serviced by symptom (no ice, slow harvest, supply and drain faults); Frigidaire builds residential ice makers rather than standalone commercial ice machines
  • Wine Coolers — Frigidaire FFWC and FGWC wine coolers — symptom-led work covering a cooler that will not hold temperature, compressor or fan noise, failed LED lighting and door-seal issues (electronic models show F1/F2/F3 or HH/LL)
  • Trash Compactors — older Frigidaire TC and TCU compactors (discontinued, parts-only) — serviced by symptom alone (won’t start, motor runs but won’t compact, ram stuck, drawer jammed) since they carry no fault codes

The faults we resolve most in South Carolina

Across the calls we take in South Carolina, a familiar set of complaints recurs, shaped by Lowcountry corrosion and humid ignition. South Carolina homes throw the same handful of Frigidaire faults at us. The pattern holds: gas burners, cooktops, freezers and the legacy compactor carry no fault codes at all, so they are read by symptom. Stated simply, the oven side reports F30 and F31 for the sensor and F90 and F91 for the door lock, with F1 pointing at the control board. A door locked after self-clean — F90. On a Frigidaire, an electric oven signals a drifting sensor as F30 or F31, a door lock that will not release as F90 or F91, and a temperature runaway as F10 — disconnect the power and stop using it. Across the lineup, on the dishwasher an i40 or i20 means the drain path is restricted, and an i10 means it is not filling. The rule of thumb: the washer speaks in E-codes — E11 and E13 for water and fill, E21 and E23 for drain, E41 for the lock. Read honestly, a dryer that will not heat usually shows E64 for an open element, though a lint-choked vent does the same damage without any code. Refrigerators report PF, SY EF and SY CE; freezers report nothing and are read by symptom.

Statewide coverage across South Carolina

We cover every community and the communities around them on a scheduled rotation. Every corner of South Carolina — city block, suburb or back road — falls inside our distributed technician network, and slots are confirmed quickly once you book. We operate across all 50 states and the District of Columbia, take requests around the clock, and target a 24-48 hour response, with same-day visits where availability allows.

Reading genuine Frigidaire fault codes

A Frigidaire tells a South Carolina owner what is wrong only where it has electronics. Range and oven problems read as F1 (control), F11 (keypad), F30/F31 (sensor), F90/F91 (door lock) or F10 (temperature runaway, which means disconnect the power); a dryer reads E5B or E64 (no heat) or E24/E25 (thermistor), and restricted airflow shows up as clothes left damp rather than as a code. A refrigerator shows PF, SY EF or SY CE. A gas burner, a cooktop, a FFFU freezer or a legacy compactor has no code at all, so we diagnose by symptom. See our error-code library for meanings and honest fixes.

Keeping your Frigidaire appliances healthy in South Carolina

Frigidaire appliances in South Carolina ask for very little, but they do ask. Preventive care is the quiet half of Frigidaire ownership in South Carolina: clean and dry the burner ports, rinse the dishwasher filter, clear the full dryer vent path, and keep the refrigerator and oven door gaskets clean so they seal. If an oven will not reach temperature, if a burner clicks long after it has dried out, or if an F-code keeps returning, that is our cue rather than yours — book a visit before the fault takes the board with it.

Pricing and scheduling in South Carolina

Every South Carolina visit opens with a full diagnosis and a written estimate before any work begins. Diagnostic visits across South Carolina begin from $89; what the repair costs after that depends on the model, the parts and the configuration, so we put it in writing first and never quote a fixed price unseen. We fit genuine OEM parts so your South Carolina refrigerator, range or dishwasher performs as engineered, and we stand behind the labor we perform with a 30-day labor warranty. South Carolina visits are booked through our online scheduling form; our repair services page shows everything we cover. South Carolina owners who want the original specifications will find them at the manufacturer’s site at frigidaire.com.

Frigidaire experienced technicians service every Frigidaire appliance in South Carolina — cooktops, dishwashers, dryers, freezers, ice machines, ice makers, ovens, ranges, refrigerators, trash compactors, washers, and wine coolers. Schedule service or call us for expert help.

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Frigidaire repair
in South Carolina

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