12001620 Oven Control Board Repair Service
Your oven is throwing an F1 or F3 error code, and if you have already tried replacing the temperature sensor, the control board is what is actually failing. Part number 12001620 has been discontinued by the manufacturer. New replacements do not exist anymore. You can spend $800 to $1,200 on a new range, or you can send us the board and we will rebuild it for $199.99. This is a mail-in repair service for your existing control board. Ship it to us, we rebuild it at the component level with upgraded parts, and get it back to you within 24 hours. Simple as that. Symptoms This Repair Fixes The 12001620 board develops relay failures, cracked solder joints, and degraded capacitors over time. Here is what you will notice when it starts going bad. F1 Error Code: The board's internal relay or processing circuit has failed. The oven cannot regulate temperature and will either shut down or behave erratically. F3 Error Code: This signals an open temperature sensor circuit. If the sensor itself checks out fine (should read around 1,100 ohms at room temperature), the board is the problem. Oven Not Reaching Temperature: The bake relay on the board fails to energize the heating element consistently. Your oven heats up partway and stalls. Oven Will Not Shut Off: A shorted relay keeps the element energized continuously. This is a fire hazard. Do not ignore this symptom. Disconnect the oven and get the board repaired immediately. Dead Oven, No Display: Complete power loss to the control panel. No buttons respond, no display lights up. The power supply section on the board has failed. Random Error Codes: Intermittent F2, F4, or other codes that come and go usually point to deteriorating solder joints that break contact as the board heats and cools. Why This Board Fails The 12001620 controls the bake relay, broil relay, temperature sensor input, and display interface. Every time your oven cycles on and off, the board goes through thermal stress. Over thousands of heating cycles, the solder joints on the high-current relay pins develop micro-fractures. The electrolytic capacitors in the power supply section take the worst of it. They dry out from years of heat exposure inside the oven cavity. Once they start degrading, error codes and temperature regulation issues follow. Compatible Part Numbers If your board has any of these numbers printed on it, this is the correct repair service. 12001620 (primary OEM number) 74002968 74002967 74002966 74002007 74002006 100-00979-00A 110170099 7601P432-60 Oven Models That Use This Board This control board is found in Maytag, Magic Chef, Admiral, Jenn-Air, Kenmore, and Crosley gas ranges and wall ovens from the late 1990s through the mid-2000s. Maytag: CWG3100AAE, CWG3100AAB, CWG3600AAB, CWG4100AAB, CWG4600AAB Jenn-Air: CRG7700BAL, CRG7700BAW, CRG7700CAL, CRG7700CAW Magic Chef / Kenmore: 62945765690, DF253660, DF253661, DF253667 If your model is not listed but your board matches one of the part numbers above, this repair still applies. Call us at (417) 241-4456 if you want to confirm before ordering. What You Get 24-Hour Turnaround: Your board ships back within one business day of arriving at our facility. 1-Year Warranty: Full coverage on all repaired components. If anything fails within the warranty period, we fix it again at no charge. Component-Level Rebuild: We replace the failed relays, capacitors, and any degraded components with upgraded parts rated for higher thermal tolerance. This is not a quick reflow job. Plug and Play: Your rebuilt board drops right back into your oven. No rewiring, no modifications, no technician needed beyond basic installation. This Part Is Discontinued The manufacturer no longer produces the 12001620 control board. Aftermarket replacements are either unavailable or unreliable. If your board fails and you cannot repair it, the alternative is replacing the entire oven. At $199.99, this repair saves you hundreds compared to a new appliance and gets your existing oven running better than it did with the original board. Not Sure If Your Board Is the Problem? Before you order, check your oven temperature sensor. Unplug the sensor connector at the back of the oven and measure across the two pins with a multimeter. A good sensor reads around 1,100 ohms at room temperature. If it reads open or far outside that range, replace the sensor first. If the sensor tests fine and the error codes persist, the board is what needs repair. Still not sure? Give us a call at (417) 241-4456 and we will help you figure it out before you spend a dollar.
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- Default Title — 199.99 USD — In stock
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