How an Amana appliance reports a fault
Amana appliances differ sharply in how much they tell you, and knowing which category you own is the first step to an accurate repair. The code-rich appliances — the range, the wall oven, the dishwasher and the washer — report genuine fault codes; the refrigerator and the dryer are mixed; and three categories carry no code display at all. Reading the right signal points an experienced technician at a specific part, while a symptom points at a burner, a fan, a filter, a thermostat or a worn mechanical part. This page explains the genuine signals Amana uses; each type also has its own breakdown in the error codes library.
The code-rich categories
Modern Amana ranges, wall ovens, dishwashers and washers use an F#E# scheme — Amana writes the digits F-then-E, for example F3 E1. On a range or wall oven you will see codes such as F3 E0/E1 (oven sensor), F5 E0/E1 (door lock), F6 E1 (over-temp during a cook) and F9 E0 (electrical or miswire, common right after install); older boards instead show single-character codes from F0 to FF. A dishwasher reports faults such as F6E1 (no/low water), F8E2 (drain pump) and F9E1 (will not drain), and a non-display model flashes the same code through the Clean light. A washer shows codes such as F8 E1 (long fill, also LF) and F9 E1 (long drain, also Ld), with lettered aliases like Sd, uL and LOC.
The mixed categories
An Amana refrigerator shows only a tiny consumer set — the PO power-outage alert and the Door Ajar / Door Open icon — so almost everything else is read by symptom. An Amana dryer is split: electronic-display models show codes such as PF, AF, L2 and an F#E# set, while the many mechanical-timer Amana dryers have no display and are diagnosed entirely by symptom.
The symptom-only categories
Three Amana categories carry no fault codes whatsoever and are read entirely from behaviour. A standalone freezer uses a dial or setpoint control with no display. A legacy trash compactor is purely electromechanical, so it never had a code. And an Amana-branded wine cooler — a licensed Galanz single-zone unit — uses a mechanical or LED thermostat with no fault display. For these three the symptom itself is the diagnostic. Be wary of code lists copied from other manufacturers; those are not Amana codes.
When to reset and when to call
For many faults the homeowner step is the same: power-cycle at the breaker for 30 to 60 seconds and watch the panel. A post-self-clean door-lock code, a refrigerator PO alert, an off-balance washer load or a dryer airflow warning often clears with a reset or simple maintenance. A persistent sensor or relay fault, a stuck door lock, a no-heat or no-drain condition, or a gas burner that smells of gas with the knob off calls for an experienced, independent technician with the correct part. Our technicians diagnose every Amana signal across all nine categories; confirm your model at amana.com, then book your repair.