Oven won't heat
An oven that won't heat splits immediately into two very different diagnostic paths depending on whether your oven is gas or electric. Electric ovens generate heat by passing current through bake or broil elements — visible metal loops at the bottom (bake) and top (broil) of the oven cavity. When a bake element fails open, the oven appears dead even though the top element may still work; users often notice this because their oven browns food from above but doesn't bake properly. Gas ovens ignite gas with an igniter (either a glow bar that heats to ignition temperature or a spark igniter that produces an arc), and the most common failure is an aging glow bar that glows but doesn't reach the temperature needed to open the gas safety valve. Before disassembling anything, verify the breaker hasn't tripped (electric) or that gas supply is on (gas), and confirm the oven isn't stuck in a self-clean lock state from a recent cleaning cycle.
Safety
Critical- Kill both breakers for electric oven work: Electric ovens run on 240V circuits using two breakers in tandem. Turn off both breakers at the panel before any work — killing one while the other stays on leaves 120V live on the element terminals, enough to cause serious shock. Verify power is off at the oven with a multimeter before touching any terminal.
- Gas-bearing work requires a licensed professional: Glow bar and spark igniter replacement is DIY-friendly — these are electrical components disconnected from the gas path. Gas-bearing work (orifices, regulators, gas lines, safety valves) is restricted by local code in most jurisdictions and carries real risk of leaks or explosion. If the igniter is working but the oven still won't heat, call a licensed technician — do not modify gas components yourself.
- Stop if you smell gas: If you smell gas at any point during diagnosis, stop immediately. Don't operate any electrical switches, open or close the oven door, or create any spark source. Leave the area, ventilate by opening doors and windows, and call your gas utility's emergency line from outside. Don't return until the utility confirms safety.
- Oven components stay hot after operation: Bake and broil elements, gas igniters, and oven surfaces remain hot enough to cause burns for 30-45 minutes after operation, longer after self-clean cycles. Allow full cooldown before touching internal components. Self-clean cycles can exceed 800°F — wait at least 2 hours after self-clean ends before accessing anything inside the oven.
How to approach this
Start with what's free: power supply and recent events. On electric ovens, check the circuit breaker panel — ovens run on a 240V circuit that uses two breakers, and one can trip while the other holds, leaving the control panel lit but heating dead. Reset any tripped breakers. On gas ovens, confirm the gas supply valve is fully open and that other gas appliances are working. Check whether the oven recently ran a self-clean cycle — the door lock can stick engaged after self-clean, disabling normal heating until manually reset. On electric models, visually inspect the bake element for visible breaks, blisters, or burn spots. A failed element often shows a split or bubble in the metal loop. Test continuity with a multimeter: a working element reads 10-50 ohms, infinite means it's failed open. On gas models, start a bake cycle and watch the igniter. A healthy glow bar turns bright orange-white within 30-60 seconds and reaches full brightness before the gas valve opens. An igniter that glows dull orange never gets hot enough to trip the valve — gas never flows. The igniter may be electrically intact but heat-weakened; replace it.
Repair tips for this model
From OEM manual analysis for the NE59J7630SB
From the service manual
Good to know
2 technician insights for this model
diagnostic_shortcut
Infinite switch resistance doesn't match chart? Coil winding can develop internal oxidation. Measure at multiple positions. If reading drifts or unstable across positions, mechanical contacts are oxidized. Clean or replace switch.
repair_tip
After replacing main PCB, oven randomly reboots? Likely EMI from cooktop element switching. Verify shielded cable is used on convection harness and all connectors are fully seated. Poor EMI shielding causes microcontroller resets.
Common causes
Ordered by how frequently each component is involved, based on OEM manual analysis.
Failed bake element (electric models)
Most commonThe bake element is the metal loop at the bottom of the oven cavity that provides the primary heat source for baking. It fails open over years of thermal cycling — the metal eventually cracks or burns through. A visible break, blister, or burned section is often apparent. Test continuity with a multimeter (10-50 ohms working, infinite failed). Replacement elements run $30-80 and install via two screws at the back wall of the oven.
Weak or failed glow bar igniter (gas models)
CommonGlow bar igniters heat to roughly 1800°F to trip the gas safety valve open. Over years, the carbide material weakens — the igniter still glows (often dull orange) but no longer reaches the temperature needed to open the valve. Gas never flows, no ignition. This is the single most common gas oven failure. The igniter may test good for continuity but fail functionally. Watch the glow: healthy igniters are bright orange-white, not dull orange.
Failed thermostat or thermistor
CommonThe oven's temperature sensor reports cavity temperature to the control; if it fails open or drifts significantly, the control may not command heating at all. Older ovens use mechanical thermostats (sensing bulb), newer ovens use thermistors (resistance varies with temperature). Test thermistors with a multimeter at room temperature — values vary significantly by brand; consult your manual for the spec at a reference temperature. Replacement thermistors run $20-40 and are DIY-accessible behind the oven back panel.
Self-clean lock stuck
CommonSelf-clean cycles engage a motorized door lock to prevent opening during the extreme heat. If the lock motor or sensor fails to release after the cycle ends, the oven control remains in 'self-clean complete, door locked' mode and disables normal heating. Manual reset procedures vary by model — consult the manual, or unplug for 10 minutes and restore power. Failed lock assemblies typically run $50-150 to replace.
Tripped breaker (electric models)
CommonElectric ovens use 240V circuits with two breakers. One can trip from an element short, a control board fault, or a self-clean overload while the other stays engaged. The oven's display and control panel often remain lit (they run on 120V from one leg), but heating is disabled because the element needs both legs. Check the panel — reset any tripped breakers, and investigate why they tripped if they trip again.
Failed gas safety valve (gas models)
Less commonThe safety valve controls gas flow to the oven burner, opening only when the igniter signals sufficient heat. Diagnostic fork: if the igniter glows dull orange, replace the igniter (weakened carbide); if the igniter glows bright orange-white but no ignition occurs, the safety valve has failed. Safety valves fail when the internal coil burns out or the valve seat corrodes. Replacement involves gas line disconnection; consider licensed service rather than DIY.
Verified Components
Parts
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About this content. Common causes and FAQs are generated from OEM manual analysis and verified parts data. This is general guidance - your specific model may have different components or access points. Always verify with your model's documentation before ordering parts.