GE Microwave SENSOR Error: Sensor cook calibration error
This guide covers GE microwave SENSOR error in detail to help you diagnose and resolve the issue. What Does GE Microwave Error Code SENSOR Mean? The SENSOR error code means the microwave’s auto-sensing system encountered an out-of-range steam reading during its calibration check at the start of a sensor cook cycle. GE Profile PVM9005, Café […]
Quick Assessment
Answer to continue safely
Is it safe to keep using?
Yes. The SENSOR code only affects auto-sensing cook modes. Manual timed cooking at any power level works normally and is completely safe to use. Avoid Sensor Cook functions until the sensor is serviced.
Can I reset the code?
Yes. The SENSOR code clears by pressing Clear/Off. If the fault was caused by a steamy or cold cavity, simply allowing the cavity to normalize and retrying resolves the issue. A failing sensor will cause SENSOR to appear on every auto-sense attempt.
When to stop immediately?
Stop if you notice: SENSOR appears during manual timed cooking — indicates a deeper sensor or board fault, Cavity shows signs of arcing (burn marks, sparking) near the sensor port.
Symptoms You May Notice
Sensor Cook mode ends early without a completion chime
The microwave stops before the food appears fully cooked, displays "SENSOR," and returns to standby — the auto-sensing cycle detected an unexpected steam profile and aborted.
"SENSOR" shown mid-cycle during auto-cook modes
The error appears specifically during Sensor Cook, Sensor Reheat, or Popcorn auto-sense programs. Manual timed cooking at any power level continues to work normally.
Food undercooked when using Sensor Cook
The abort happens before the food reaches target temperature, consistently leaving items cool in the center — the sensor is not reading steam levels accurately enough to complete the cycle.
Error occurs more often with low-moisture foods
Sensor cook relies on detecting steam — very dry foods (popcorn, crackers, frozen bread) emit less steam at the start of cooking and can trigger premature SENSOR errors on a marginally functioning sensor.
Possible Causes
Sensor cook used in a cold or steam-saturated cavity
Running sensor cook immediately after a previous cycle (cavity still steamy) or in a very cold kitchen gives the sensor an abnormal baseline, causing calibration to fail before cooking begins.
DIY PossibleGrease coating on the humidity sensor element
A film of cooking grease on the sensor alters its response to steam, causing out-of-range readings during the initial calibration sweep.
DIY PossibleDegraded humidity sensor
The sensor element has aged to the point where its calibrated response curve no longer matches the expected values stored in the control board firmware.
Requires ProfessionalSafe Checks You Can Do
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1
Allow the cavity to reach room temperature
If SENSOR appeared after back-to-back cooking, open the microwave door for 5–10 minutes to let residual steam and heat dissipate. Close the door and attempt the Sensor Cook cycle again with the cavity at ambient temperature.
GE recommends not using Sensor Cook functions when the kitchen temperature is below 60°F (15°C) — cold ambient air affects the steam sensor baseline.
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2
Clean the cavity and allow to dry
Wipe the cavity interior with a mild soap solution and dry thoroughly. Pay attention to the sensor port area. Allow 20 minutes of air-drying with the door ajar before running another sensor cook test.
Run a simple 1-cup water heating test at full power before testing Sensor Cook — this confirms the magnetron and manual cooking system are fully functional.
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3
Use manual timed cooking as a workaround
If SENSOR errors recur, switch to manual timed cooking with the appropriate power level for your food type. All cooking results are identical — sensor mode simply automates the timing. Schedule service if sensor functionality is important for your cooking routine.
GE's owner's manual includes a manual cooking time reference chart for common foods as an alternative to sensor modes.
When to Call a Professional
Contact a qualified technician if:
- SENSOR returns on every auto-cook attempt even after cleaning and cavity normalization
- Sensor cook worked previously but fails consistently after heavy cooking use — sensor degradation
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