The La Cornue model archive maps the brand’s hand-built cooking appliances so you can identify yours and find the right service. La Cornue has built to order since 1908, and the catalogue is organised into families rather than a long list of fixed SKUs: the top-tier Château line with its sealed radiant “voûte” vaulted oven, the factory-built CornuFé pro-style cookers, and the matching hoods. Every unit is specified by family, size, fuel, finish, and rangetop configuration, which is why two cookers wearing the same family name can differ greatly inside.
The Château family
The Château line runs from the Château 60 (60cm, one vaulted oven, induction rangetop) up through the 75, 90, 120, 150, and 165 to the flagship Grand Palais 180 (model G48). The smaller Châteaus carry a single vaulted oven, while the 120, 150, 165, and Grand Palais pair a gas and an electric vaulted oven for true dual-fuel cooking; the 165 and Grand Palais add warming drawers. Rangetop layouts are set by configuration codes — B1–B3 and BA/BB on the 75, C1–C5 on the 90, E0–E5 on the 120, K1–K6 on the 150 (US prefix G45), and N1–N9 on the Grand Palais. Use our range repair service for any of these.
The CornuFé family
The factory-built CornuFé cookers bring La Cornue craftsmanship in a freestanding pro-style format. The CornuFé 90 “Albertine” (90cm, US SKUs C9MF/C93/C9RF/C9AF) offers dual-fuel or induction with one seven-mode multifunction convection oven plus a drawer and five brass gas burners or a five-zone induction top. The CornuFé 110 (110cm, C1-prefix SKUs) adds a second electric convection oven. Both can wear the named finish lines — the Suzanne Kasler Couleur Collection and the Étoilé Collection — alongside the classic enamel colours.
Finishes, trim, and the rangetop modules
Beyond size and fuel, a model is defined by its finish and its rangetop modules. La Cornue offers roughly 50 vitreous-enamel colours — including the named Suzanne Kasler Couleur Collection and the Étoilé Collection alongside classics such as Ivory, Provence Yellow, and Cornue Blue — with trim in polished or brushed brass, nickel, chrome, or copper, plus matte black, matte bronze, and stainless. The hob itself is built from mix-and-match modules: brass “flammes” burners, the cast-iron French Top, a lava-rock grill, induction zones, an electric Teppanyaki plate, and the Flamberge gas rotisserie. The same permutations also generate the model variants you will see, such as “Château 90 Dual-Fuel Polished Brass French Top.”
Matching hoods and reading a model name
The line also includes matching hoods — the four-speed Château hood and the CornuFé Hood Collection styles, Cascade, Euclid, Loge, and Marquee — finished to coordinate with the cooker below. A full model name combines family, size in centimetres, fuel, rangetop configuration code, finish, and trim, for example “CornuFé 110 Induction Étoilé.” US imports often carry SKU prefixes such as G45, G48, C9, and C1. If your cooker is showing trouble, start with our fault code and diagnostics database, which covers induction codes like E2, U400, and Er as well as gas diagnostic signs. The rangetop modules and hoods have their own pages too, all reachable from the broader model archive.
Service for every model
Our technicians service every La Cornue model regardless of age or finish, using genuine parts and respecting the brass and enamel, and the work is backed by the brand’s 5-year parts-and-labour warranty with parts coordinated through the National Service Center at 1-877-522-6768. Specifications can be confirmed on the official La Cornue website. When you have identified your model, schedule a repair — diagnostic service starts from $129, and any quote is given before work begins, with the final figure depending on the part and configuration.