How a Frigidaire wall oven reports a fault
Frigidaire wall ovens use the same Electronic Oven Control platform as the ranges, so the same “F” code family applies. The first step in any Frigidaire oven repair is reading the code, then testing the named part before replacing it.
The codes you will see
F10 is a temperature runaway — safety-critical: disconnect power and do not use the oven until it is repaired (a shorted RTD or a stuck relay). F30 means an open bake temperature probe and F31 a shorted probe. F90 means the door latch will not unlock after a self-clean cycle, leaving the door stuck. F1 and F11 are a failed control or a stuck keypad, and F13 is a control-memory (EEPROM) error.
What to check, and when to call
For a one-off door-latch code after self-clean, let the oven cool fully and power-cycle at the breaker for five minutes. A stuck-keypad code often clears after the panel dries. An F10 runaway means you stop using the oven immediately. A recurring sensor (F30, F31), door-latch (F90, F91) or control (F1, F11, F13) code needs an experienced, independent technician with the correct genuine OEM part. See the oven error codes page or the error codes library, then book oven repair.