Oven High Severity
5121 Appliance Error Code

Wolf Oven 5121 Error: Upper Cavity Over-Temp

What Does Wolf Oven Fault Code 5121 Mean? The 5121 fault code on a Wolf M Series wall oven is an upper cavity over-temperature event during non-clean operation. Wolf defines a maximum safe temperature for normal cooking that is well below the self-clean temperature ceiling, and 5121 fires when the cavity sensor reports a reading […]

Quick Assessment

Answer to continue safely

Is it safe to keep using?

No. Do not attempt another cook cycle until the cause of the over-temperature is identified. If food residue or foil caused the event, a thorough cleaning may be enough. If the cavity was empty when 5121 fired, the fault is electronic and needs a technician.

Can I reset the code?

Yes. A breaker reset clears the latched code once the cavity has cooled. The underlying hardware fault (if any) does not self-repair, so 5121 will return on the next cook cycle if something electronic was the cause.

When to stop immediately?

Stop if you notice: 5121 returns with an empty, clean cavity, Any visible scorch marks or discoloration on the cavity liner.

Symptoms You May Notice

Oven shuts down during a normal cook cycle

A bake, broil, or convection program cancels abruptly mid-cycle when the cavity temperature sensor reports a reading above the safe operating limit.

Audible relay click followed by cooling fan ramp-up

The over-temperature cutoff fires, you hear the main cook relay open, and the cooling fan runs faster to dissipate cavity heat.

Cavity smells scorched or shows burned residue

The condition often leaves a distinct hot-oven odor and may leave visible burn marks on food or racks that were in the cavity when 5121 fired.

Possible Causes

1

Upper cavity temperature sensor drifted low

A sensor reading lower than actual temperature causes the board to command more heat than needed, eventually pushing cavity temperature above the safe limit.

Requires Professional
2

Bake or broil relay welded closed

A stuck relay leaves the heating element energized after the control has commanded it off, letting the cavity climb past the setpoint.

Requires Professional
3

Food residue combusting in the cavity

Heavy food residue, grease, or foil lining the cavity can ignite during normal cooking and push temperatures past the safety limit.

DIY Possible

Safe Checks You Can Do

These checks are safe for homeowners. No disassembly required. Do not remove panels or access internal components.
  1. 1

    Let the cavity cool completely

    Switch off the dedicated wall oven breaker. Leave the oven door cracked to vent heat and allow the cavity to return to room temperature before any further testing. Allow at least 60 minutes.

    Never force-cool with water — thermal shock can crack the cavity glass or liner.

  2. 2

    Inspect the cavity visually

    Once cool, check for burned food residue, scorched racks, aluminum foil on the cavity floor, or anything else that could have caused a combustion event during cooking. Remove everything from the cavity and clean it thoroughly.

    Aluminum foil on the oven bottom is a classic 5121 trigger — it reflects heat back and disrupts normal temperature distribution.

When to Call a Professional

Contact a qualified technician if:

  • Cavity was empty when 5121 fired
  • No temperature calibration service in 5+ years
  • 5121 is accompanied by any other fault code

Need Professional Help?

Find qualified technicians in your area for proper diagnostics and repair.

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