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F3E1

Whirlpool Dryer

Severity: Moderate

What it means

Whirlpool dryer F3E1 is the exhaust thermistor fault.
Whirlpool's documentation links F3E1 to the exhaust thermistor — the small sensor in the exhaust duct that measures air temperature for the control to manage heat cycling.
The published fix starts with a power cycle.

Affected Models

  • Whirlpool WED4815 / WED4850 / WED5000 series electric dryers
  • Whirlpool WED7120 / WED8120 / WED9620 Cabrio series
  • Whirlpool WGD4815 / WGD5000 / WGD7120 series gas dryers
  • Whirlpool Compact Heat Pump dryers (WHD862, WHD560)
  • Same F+E codes appear on Maytag, KitchenAid, and Amana dryers (shared platform)

Common Causes

  • Intermittent thermistor reading the control rejected as out of range
  • Thermistor wiring connector loose at the harness
  • Exhaust vent so clogged that temperature swings exceed the thermistor's normal range
  • Failed exhaust thermistor (after lint, vent, and reset are confirmed)
  • Control board fault that misreads the thermistor signal

How to Fix It

  1. Clean the lint screen and check the vent.

    Before doing any reset, clear the lint screen and confirm the exhaust vent isn't badly clogged.
    A heavily restricted vent causes wild temperature swings the thermistor reads as out-of-range — and the dryer logs F3E1 even though the sensor is fine.

  2. Power cycle for 1 minute.

    Whirlpool's exact step: 'Power unit down by turning off the circuit breaker(s) for one (1) minute. Power up the unit by turning on the circuit breaker(s). Start a time dry cycle.'
    The full 1-minute wait matters — shorter resets don't fully clear the control's logged state.

  3. Run a short test cycle.

    Whirlpool: 'Monitor the dryer for one (1) minute to ensure the error code does not display again.'
    Pick a short Timed Dry cycle, start it, and watch for F3E1 in the first minute.
    If it doesn't appear, the reset worked.

  4. Schedule service if F3E1 returns.

    If F3E1 reappears straight after a clean-vent and 1-minute reset, the thermistor itself or its wiring is suspect.
    The thermistor mounts on the exhaust duct inside the cabinet and isn't owner-accessible on most modern Whirlpool dryers.
    This is a Whirlpool service call.

When to Call a Professional

Whirlpool publishes a power-cycle reset as the owner step.
If F3E1 returns after the reset, the exhaust thermistor or its wiring needs service — this isn't an owner repair on modern Whirlpool dryers.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does Whirlpool start with a power cycle when the code points at the thermistor?

Many F3E1 occurrences are momentary — a brief electrical glitch, a one-off reading the control rejected, or a recovery state after an interrupted cycle.
A 1-minute power cycle clears those transient cases without any parts.
If F3E1 returns immediately after, the thermistor itself is suspect — and at that point you have a clean diagnostic that justifies a service visit.