View Full Version : Overheating microwave oven
stephen.q.pankow
09-07-2020, 10:11 AM
We have an Iris model home in Fenney which has the microwave oven above the stove. Whenever we do any significant amount of cooking on the stove the fan in the microwave starts up running at full blast for several minutes, I assume to cool down the microwave oven. I'd rather not start trying to enjoy dinner with this racket going on in the background.
Is this a common problem, and has anyone found a way to fix it?
charlieo1126@gmail.com
09-07-2020, 11:05 AM
This may sound silly but there are options to turn down fan , you just keep hitting the fan button. If it’s new home just call warranty, frankly in 14 homes, 5 in villages never heard of problem
Stu from NYC
09-07-2020, 11:48 AM
I would contact manufacturer of the microwave and see if they have answer.
If that does not work consider an exorcism.
retiredguy123
09-07-2020, 12:36 PM
You need to determine if the microwave has been modified to vent to the outside of your house. Most of them do not. They merely circulate air through a metal filter at the bottom of the microwave and back into the kitchen. The microwave will have a fan button on the front panel that will manually turn the fan on and off and usually will have two speeds. It sounds like someone may have modified your microwave fan to operate on a thermostat instead of the usual manual operation. If so, that would be highly unusual. I would try to locate the thermostat and disable it. I would start by removing the metal panel and filter at the bottom of the microwave and look for a thermostat attached to the fan motor. Good luck.
MSchad
09-07-2020, 12:45 PM
Ours does the same thing. It is designed to come on when the temp gets extremely high. If you look at the readout on the microwave, it will says automatic fan or something to that effect.
retiredguy123
09-07-2020, 01:00 PM
Ours does the same thing. It is designed to come on when the temp gets extremely high. If you look at the readout on the microwave, it will says automatic fan or something to that effect.
You are correct. Here is a link with instructions on how to turn off the automatic fan feature on a Whirlpool oven. The feature is designed to protect the microwave electronics from overheating, but, I think I may turn it off and use the manual fan when cooking.
Access Denied (https://www.hunker.com/12002891/how-to-turn-off-the-automatic-fan-of-a-whirlpool-over-the-range-microwave)
Sensei
09-08-2020, 04:49 AM
Shortly after moving to the Villages, it was clear an over the stove microwave was a mistake, poor ventilation, placed too high to easily manage large items, difficult to observe cooking. Removed the microwave and placed it elsewhere. Installed a proper efficient hood to vent outside.
retiredguy123
09-08-2020, 05:08 AM
Shortly after moving to the Villages, it was clear an over the stove microwave was a mistake, poor ventilation, placed too high to easily manage large items, difficult to observe cooking. Removed the microwave and placed it elsewhere. Installed a proper efficient hood to vent outside.
Probably a good idea if you do a lot of cooking. But, the standard over the stove microwave has a fan that can be positioned to vent to the outside. However, the builder usually doesn't install it that way.
jokefawcett
09-08-2020, 05:19 AM
It is a safety feature for 2 reasons 1) to protect the microwave and 2) to ensure The excess heat that is being sensed, is being evacuated. I would not disable.
arbajeda
09-08-2020, 05:51 AM
There is a vent to the outside in your microwave. The fan keeps the heat from building up on the bottom.
GOLFER54
09-08-2020, 06:17 AM
Unplug it and turn it into a fish tank.
bowlingal
09-08-2020, 06:23 AM
call the warranty dept. you are covered for ANYTHING that goes wrong in your new house. Don't suffer when you don't have to. I do not have that problem with my microwave and it is also over the stove. Doesn't sound like it should be happening,
retiredguy123
09-08-2020, 06:41 AM
There is a vent to the outside in your microwave. The fan keeps the heat from building up on the bottom.
To clarify, on most microwave ovens, the fan will suck air through the bottom of the microwave and will discharge it through the vent holes in the top, front part of the microwave. So, you are blowing hot air toward the drywall kitchen ceiling. You may be reducing the temperature directly above the cooktop, but you are not removing any heat from the kitchen. In my opinion, this is not a good design. The builder should install a vent through the exterior wall or roof. The microwave ovens are designed to allow the fan position to be changed to discharge the air to an outside vent.
retiredguy123
09-08-2020, 07:00 AM
call the warranty dept. you are covered for ANYTHING that goes wrong in your new house. Don't suffer when you don't have to. I do not have that problem with my microwave and it is also over the stove. Doesn't sound like it should be happening,
Like me, you probably have the feature, but didn't know it. The bottom of the microwave has to get hot before the fan will come on and override the manual fan setting.
MandoMan
09-08-2020, 07:53 AM
Shortly after moving to the Villages, it was clear an over the stove microwave was a mistake, poor ventilation, placed too high to easily manage large items, difficult to observe cooking. Removed the microwave and placed it elsewhere. Installed a proper efficient hood to vent outside.
Good for you! Ranges should always have real range hoods that vent outside, ideally with powerful but very quiet fans. Of course, you are talking several hundred dollars for the vent and fan, and then there is installation, perhaps with a soffit around the pipe, and a roof penetration to flash and seal. And, you’ll be sucking in hot, humid air from outside to replace the hot, humid air you are expelling. I wonder if it even makes any sense to vent outside instead of into the attic, given that the attic is hot and humid. Maybe, though, cooking in winter when the attic is cooler would lead to the humidity soaking the insulation in the attic. If your stove is against an outside wall, sometimes you can vent directly through the wall, which is a lot cheaper and easier and more efficient.
I hate hot, steamy cooking, and I hate hot, steamy bathrooms. I believe in good ventilation.
wiltma
09-08-2020, 08:13 AM
We have an Iris model home in Fenney which has the microwave oven above the stove. Whenever we do any significant amount of cooking on the stove the fan in the microwave starts up running at full blast for several minutes, I assume to cool down the microwave oven. I'd rather not start trying to enjoy dinner with this racket going on in the background.
Is this a common problem, and has anyone found a way to fix it?
Ours does that every once in a while. Good safety feature. Let it run for a little while and then press to shut it off
doctorknow
09-08-2020, 09:36 AM
I have a IRIS and a Whirlpool microwave. It is not an automatic fan. I never knew (if it does) it had such a feature. I have to turn fan on manually which is the way I want it. I also have a vent to the outside which is the way it should be. I don't know if yours is newer ?? I moved into my IRIS in 2012. so yours may be a newer upgrade??
TandHSTAR@AOL.com
09-08-2020, 12:54 PM
Exorcism hmm how does that work. LOL
Bob45
09-08-2020, 01:25 PM
We have an Iris model home in Fenney which has the microwave oven above the stove. Whenever we do any significant amount of cooking on the stove the fan in the microwave starts up running at full blast for several minutes, I assume to cool down the microwave oven. I'd rather not start trying to enjoy dinner with this racket going on in the background.
Is this a common problem, and has anyone found a way to fix it?
Try turning on the fan while you're cooking. Then off when you sit down to eat. Maybe that will keep it cool enough and it will not start while you're eating.
MSchad
09-08-2020, 02:16 PM
Probably a good idea if you do a lot of cooking. But, the standard over the stove microwave has a fan that can be positioned to vent to the outside. However, the builder usually doesn't install it that way.
Our microwave is vented. When we had our home inspection they found the vent had separated at a seam and had the warranty dept fix it.
Nick Kelly
09-08-2020, 04:21 PM
It is a safety feature. It also adds to the longevity of the microwave. Go the the appliance manufacturers website ( I found it annoying also, so I went to Whirlpools website) I did not read anything that would allow you to turn the fan off manually. It is what is is. Our cam with the house also and we had no clue.
retiredguy123
09-08-2020, 04:41 PM
It is a safety feature. It also adds to the longevity of the microwave. Go the the appliance manufacturers website ( I found it annoying also, so I went to Whirlpools website) I did not read anything that would allow you to turn the fan off manually. It is what is is. Our cam with the house also and we had no clue.
See the link in Post No. 6. There is a way to disable the overheat feature, if you want to.
champion6
09-08-2020, 06:33 PM
To clarify, on most microwave ovens, the fan will suck air through the bottom of the microwave and will discharge it through the vent holes in the top, front part of the microwave. So, you are blowing hot air toward the drywall kitchen ceiling. You may be reducing the temperature directly above the cooktop, but you are not removing any heat from the kitchen. In my opinion, this is not a good design. The builder should install a vent through the exterior wall or roof. The microwave ovens are designed to allow the fan position to be changed to discharge the air to an outside vent.My cottage home was built in 2011. This IS exactly the way my microwave is vented. The microwave is mounted on an interior wall, so the microwave exhausts into a duct that goes straight up to a vent on the roof.
bill.noltecpa@gmail.com
09-08-2020, 07:18 PM
Believe the fire code is 18 inches between stove to microwave, make sure you have that in addition to the other comments already made by others.
retiredguy123
09-08-2020, 09:25 PM
My cottage home was built in 2011. This IS exactly the way my microwave is vented. The microwave is mounted on an interior wall, so the microwave exhausts into a duct that goes straight up to a vent on the roof.
You are lucky. But, many of the microwave ovens have no venting to the outside.
Halibut
09-13-2020, 09:19 AM
I wonder if the different venting options are related to gas vs electric stoves?
If you haven't already, you might try a small experiment by using the smaller front burner rather than the larger one that (in my unit) is directly under the handle of the microwave and gives off more heat. All bets are off if multiple burners are in use!
Good luck with a fix and let us know.
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