La Cornue Oven Temperature Drift and Calibration
La Cornue Oven Temperature Drift and Calibration is a common question among La Cornue owners. This guide walks through it step by step with technician-grade detail.
If dishes brown too fast or too slowly in your La Cornue, the oven temperature may be drifting from the set point. This guide explains how to verify the drift and what causes it.
Confirm the drift first
Use an independent oven thermometer placed in the center of the oven. Set the oven to a known temperature (for example 350°F), let it fully preheat and stabilize, and compare the thermometer reading to the set point. Take several readings over time, since ovens cycle around the target. A consistent offset confirms drift.
Common causes of temperature drift
- Thermostat calibration: Mechanical thermostats can drift out of calibration over years of use.
- Failing temperature sensor (electronic ovens): An out-of-spec sensor reports the wrong temperature, so the oven over- or under-heats.
- Worn door gasket: Heat escaping around the door makes the oven run cool and struggle to hold temperature — see our door gasket care guide.
- Radiant hot spots (vaulted oven): The voûte distributes heat differently than a fan oven; what feels like drift may be rack placement — see our uneven baking guide.
Calibration
Some La Cornue ovens allow a calibration offset adjustment so the displayed temperature matches actual. The exact method varies by model — mechanical thermostat dials are adjusted differently than electronic controls. Consult your model documentation on lacornueusa.com. If the offset needed is large or grows over time, the thermostat or sensor likely needs replacement rather than calibration.
Electronic oven faults
On electronic/multifunction ovens, a sensor open or short can trigger an Er fault. In that case calibration won’t help — the sensor must be replaced.
What you can do
- Verify drift with a reliable thermometer.
- Check and clean the door gasket; replace if worn.
- Adjust the calibration offset if your model supports it.
- If drift persists, suspect the thermostat or sensor.
Professional service
Thermostat and sensor replacement restore accurate temperatures. Schedule a technician to calibrate or replace the control for precise baking.
Verify before you adjust
The most common mistake is “fixing” drift that is really a measurement or technique issue. Always confirm with an independent oven thermometer placed in the center, let the oven fully preheat and stabilize, and take several readings since ovens cycle around the target. A consistent offset confirms genuine drift; a one-off reading during the cycle does not. Skipping this step leads to needless calibration tweaks that make matters worse.
Rule out the gasket first
A worn door gasket leaks heat and makes an oven run cool and struggle to hold temperature — symptoms easily mistaken for thermostat drift. Inspect and, if needed, replace the gasket before adjusting calibration; see our door gasket care guide. On the vaulted oven, also consider that what feels like drift may be normal radiant behavior tied to rack placement — our uneven baking guide covers that.
Frequently asked
- Calibrate or replace? A small, stable offset on a model that supports an offset adjustment calls for calibration; large or growing offsets mean replacing the thermostat or sensor.
- What if I see an “Er” code? A sensor open/short triggers an Er fault and needs replacement, not calibration — see our Er error guide.
Your step-by-step approach
Tackle drift in order: verify it with a reliable oven thermometer after a full preheat and several readings; check and clean the door gasket, replacing it if worn; adjust the calibration offset if your model supports one; and if drift persists, suspect the thermostat or sensor. On the vaulted oven, remember that the radiant heat distributes differently from a fan oven, so what reads as drift can be rack placement — our uneven baking guide helps separate technique from a true fault before you adjust anything.