Thermador double oven thermal limit reset notice — owners of Thermador Masterpiece and Professional Series double wall ovens are advised on the safe procedure to follow after a thermal limit shutdown event. Do not bypass or attempt to defeat the thermal limit safety circuit.
Why this matters
Thermador double wall ovens include a redundant thermal limit safety circuit (called the “high-limit thermostat” in the service manual) that automatically cuts power to the heating elements if the cavity temperature exceeds a safe maximum. This typically only triggers during a self-clean cycle that has run abnormally long, after a control board failure, or after a temperature sensor failure. The shutdown protects the cabinetry and prevents fire — it should never be bypassed.
What a thermal limit shutdown looks like
- The oven goes silent mid-cycle and the display goes blank or shows an error code (commonly F30, F32, or E115 depending on model year)
- The door remains locked if the shutdown occurred during a self-clean cycle
- The oven cavity remains very hot for an extended period — much longer than a normal cool-down
- Power button presses do not restart the oven
Safe reset procedure
- Do not open the oven door if it is locked — wait for the cavity to cool naturally and the safety lock to release
- Allow the oven cavity to cool fully — for a self-clean shutdown this can take 2 to 4 hours
- Once the door is unlocked and the cavity is cool to the touch, switch off the circuit breaker for the oven for 5 minutes
- Switch the breaker back on and observe whether the display lights normally
- Attempt a single short bake cycle at 350 degrees with an empty oven for 10 minutes
- If the oven runs the test cycle normally without any error display, normal operation can resume
- If any error code returns or the oven trips again, do not continue use — call for service
Do not attempt
- Do not jumper, bypass, or remove the thermal limit thermostat — this disables a critical fire safety feature and voids all manufacturer and certified-installer warranties
- Do not run the self-clean cycle again until the original cause of the shutdown has been diagnosed
- Do not ignore a recurring thermal shutdown — repeated triggers indicate a real problem with the temperature sensor, the control board, or the relay assembly
When to call a technician
Any thermal limit shutdown that recurs after the safe reset procedure requires immediate service from a Thermador-certified technician. The diagnostic typically identifies a failed temperature sensor (RTD probe), a stuck relay, or a control board fault. Repair cost is moderate; the cost of ignoring the issue can be a kitchen fire.
Related Thermador Safety & Repair Resources
Related Safety Notices
- Thermador Freedom Refrigerator Temperature Alarm Response Notice
- Thermador Cooktop Spilled Liquid Removal Safety Notice
Related Repair Guides
Schedule Thermador Appliance Repair with a Thermador-certified technician.