pushing the button
kelly | 12 June 2006 - 7:28pm
For the past year or so, our stove will on occasion begin beeping and flashing F1 E2 on its digital display. The first time this happened, we randomly pressed buttons on the touchpad until it finally stopped. Since then, we've figured out that pressing the Clock button is what works to stop the beeping/flashing and so now whenever the stove has a freak out we just press Clock and it stops.
We have no idea what F1 E2 is trying to tell us. While the people from whom we bought the house were more than happy to leave behind the motherfucking vine and the fish, they did not leave us manuals to anything. I suppose we could google the error codes, but frankly we haven't been concerned about it because the stove works fine and it's easy to stop the beeping - just press the Clock button.
One evening soon after The Button was introduced on Lost, Rob and I were eating dinner when, suddenly, BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP. I hopped up from my seat, hurried over to the stove where F1 E2 F1 E2 F1 E2 F1 E2 was flashing, and pressed the Clock button. And then I looked at Rob and said, "Oh my god, this is just like Lost."
"Ha, you're right! We have no idea why we're pressing the button, but we do it every time, faithfully."
"Yeah, we don't question it or consider doing anything to change it. We just keep pressing the button! We are mice in an experiment, trained to respond to a stimulus by pressing a button."
"How embarrassing."
"Seriously. I mean, we've been rolling our eyes at the Lost characters all season for doing pretty much the same thing."
We were at a party a few weeks later when suddenly the host's stove started beeping and flashing F1 E2 F1 E2 F1 E2. From across the room he yelled, "Hey, would somebody push the button? On the stove? Just hit Clock." It seems we're not the only slaves to the button.
This morning the stove started beeping at 4am. Rob crawled out of bed, mumbling "I've got it" as he stumbled to the kitchen to press the button. Fifteen minutes later it was beeping again. Rob sighed as he got up and headed to the kitchen again. He came back muttering, "I cannot believe we are still pressing the damn button."
"We should train the cats to push it," I replied.
We were just falling back to sleep when it went off AGAIN. "My turn," I said. I went into the kitchen and pushed Clock. The beeping stopped, but I wasn't convinced that would hold it for long since Rob's button-pushing had now failed twice to hush the stove for more than 15 minutes. So after pressing Clock I pressed the Timer button. And then Clock again, for good measure. And the stove was silent the rest of the night.
But today I'm regretting having added to the button-pushing sequence. Because the thing is, the next time the stove beeps, I'm going to push Clock Timer Clock with the hope that this magic combination will appease the stove for a longer duration of time than if I just pushed Clock. Probably (surely) it doesn't actually make any difference and probably (surely) it was just a coincidence. But just to be safe, I'll do the new sequence. I know I will. And then what? Then, the first time that doesn't do the trick for a satisfactory amount of time, I'll convince myself that an even more complex combination of button presses will work. And it will. And this sort of coincidental occurrence will happen enough times that soon I'll be pushing Clock Timer Clock Clock Timer Timer Timer Clock (pause) Timer Clock Clock.
Or maybe I'll just skip all that nonsense and enter the numbers 4 8 15 16 23 42 into the timer before pushing the Clock button. I've got a hunch that'll quell the beeping and flashing for a good 108 minutes.
- 1882 reads


Ha. That's funny, Kelly. I hope the stove knocks it off so you can get a better night's sleep.
... OR, ya dumbass, you go to the Manufacturer's website and either through search, FAQ, or query, get the answer you need. Which is probably to set the temperature of the oven to 481, and the timer to start at 5:16 and end at 23:42.
Now, isn' that better than feeding your OCD? No? Oh.
Might it be a Whirlpool?
(I googled "stove code F1 E2" and found this: http://www.repairclinic.com/0078.asp#Thermador2)
Although there are only three comments, I just KNEW that somebody had already found the Google solution for you.
Google Goddess, you have let me down.
You've been pushing the Clock button?!? All this time I've been pushing the Timer button!
I want to yell bingo..but that woul not make any sense.
Thanks, Jenny. We finally get the cats to sleep through the night and now the stove starts up. Argh.
Hee, Nilbo, you totally get me. (Smooch.)
Dude, Metro, thanks. And actually, "internal logic failure" is a dead-on diagnosis of this.
I know, yonzie. It's not that I don't got the skillz - I'm just lazy. And really, isn't pushing a button WAY easier than actually getting the damn thing fixed? (See "internal logic failure" above.)
Nuh-UH, rob! I thought the Clock button had almighty powers! Now I don't know what to believe. And dude, this is feeling more Dharma than ever.
You always make me laugh, william. Thanks for that. :)
Ha! SO like Lost! You need Sawyer to come barreling downstairs to press clock. He'd make that damn stove mind.
You could put the stove into Sabbath Mode at night, maybe...if by using Sabbath Mode, you could only set the timer for 12 hours and somehow make the oven not actually heat up. (Or could just set the timer so the darn thing was too busy to freak out?)
"The Sabbath mode feature makes it possible to use the range on the Sabbath and other religious holidays without having to turn it on. Tones, lights and error messages are over-ridden, and a set temperature can be maintained for extended periods of time."
I wonder if they have Black Sabbath mode...
this is all just entertaining.
So if you don't push the button will some team in the artic be able to pinpoint your location? Is Redneck Valley just a desert island with only one way out? If you don't push it will airplanes start falling out of the sky? Am I killing the metaphor? I'm going to say at least one of those questions can be answered in the affirmative.
Word, Amy. And oddly enough, Sawyer is a lot like a stove. He's hot and makes the world a yummier place.
LOL to Black Sabbath mode, Sheryl! Sabbath mode was one of those things I thought was a myth until my MIL bought a stove that actually had it. But I think your most brilliant suggestion is to just set the timer - why didn't we think of that?!
Not at 4 in the morning it isn't, janasayqua. :)
Definitely one affirmative, JLD. And nearly two - Redneck Valley often feels like a desert island, although I would argue there is no way out. And dude, you watch Lost? Awesome.
I'm not a Lost girl (although maybe I am??) so the sequence was lost on me. But being a little superstitious and also it would kill me to know, I'd be pushing in that number sequence to see if the beeping stopped. I'd be interested to see if the google repair process works.
Hi kristen! If we ever get around to repairing the thing, I'll be sure to report back to the class. :)