Range heating element problems on a Monogram dual-fuel range usually point to the electric oven element or the temperature sensor when the oven will not heat or bakes weakly. The gas cooktop and the electric oven are separate systems, so a cooktop that works while the oven stays cold isolates the fault to the oven side.
Signs of range heating element problems
- The oven will not heat at all while the cooktop burners work normally.
- Weak or slow heating that never reaches the setpoint.
- A bake or broil element with a visible break, blister, or burn mark.
- Uneven results that point to one element underperforming.
First checks
Confirm you selected a heating mode and waited for the full preheat. Look at the bake and broil elements (when cool) for visible damage. If the oven heats but unevenly, the issue may be calibration or the sensor rather than an element.
Read the display
- F2 – oven over-temperature (sensor or control).
- F3 – open oven temperature sensor (RTD) circuit.
- F4 – shorted oven temperature sensor (RTD) circuit.
An F3 or F4 sensor fault makes the oven misjudge heat; a dead element leaves it cold. Both are technician repairs – see the full list in our range error code archive. If baking is merely uneven, our uneven baking guide covers calibration.
When to call a technician
A failed bake or broil element, a faulty RTD sensor, or a control fault is a technician repair using genuine parts. Our range repair service can diagnose it – book a visit. Element part references for your model are on the manufacturer’s site, monogram.com.
Identifying Monogram Range Heating Element Problems
On a dual-fuel Monogram range the cooktop burns gas while the oven heats electrically, so range heating element problems can appear on either side and must be diagnosed separately. The ZDP dual-fuel models pair gas burners with an electric convection oven, which means the oven uses bake, broil, and convection elements that fail in ways gas burners never do.
Oven-Side Element Faults
- Bake element not heating: a coil with a visible break, blister, or burn spot has gone open-circuit and will not glow. The oven may still broil while failing to bake.
- Broil element dead: the upper element fails the same way; check it separately by selecting broil and watching for an even glow.
- Convection element cold: if the fan spins but air never warms, the dedicated convection element around the fan has failed even though airflow continues.
How Codes Fit In
Element failures themselves rarely store a code, but a sensing or control fault that mimics an element problem will. An F3 (open RTD circuit) or F4 (shorted RTD circuit) can leave the oven cold or runaway, which is easily mistaken for a dead element. F2 flags an over-temperature event, and F5 or F8 indicate control board failure that can interrupt element power.
Confirming Before Replacing
Before condemning an element, confirm power is reaching it and that the control is actually calling for heat; a relay on the board, not the element, may be at fault. A genuine open element reads as no continuity. Because the oven side runs on a substantial electric circuit, testing and replacement of elements is work for certified technicians using genuine Monogram parts, who will also verify the surrounding control circuit so the new element is not killed by the same underlying fault.
Bake versus broil versus convection
Test each element independently: select bake and watch the lower element glow, select broil for the upper element, and run a convection mode to confirm the rear element warms while the fan turns. Isolating which element fails to glow tells the technician exactly what to bring.
Need a range technician?
When the fix is beyond a quick check, book a diagnostic visit and our certified technicians handle it with genuine Monogram parts. Our range repair service explains the work, and full specifications live on monogram.com.