# Wolf Range Burner Won't Light or Keeps Clicking in Los Gatos: Fix It Yourself or Call?

By Steve Hartmann, Cooking Appliance Tech (12 years in the field)

Published: 2026-06-30 · Updated: 2026-07-02

Start with the bottom line: about 8 in 10 clicking Wolf burners I visit in Los Gatos are cured with a towel, a soft brush, and 15 minutes of patience, because the culprit is water on an igniter or a cap sitting a few degrees off its seat. The ticking is itself a healthy sign: voltage is reaching the electrode and the range is still trying.

So this guide follows the way I triage the fault on a real call: 4 decision points you can answer at your own cooktop. Each sorts the problem into work that is safely yours or work for a technician with a meter. Take them in order to learn which side of the line your range sits on.

## What Separates a DIY Fix From a Technician Fault?

Three requirements must meet at the burner head before flame appears: gas at the ports, a spark strong enough to leap its gap, and clean grounded metal for it to land on. Turning a Wolf control to its lighting mark closes a switch that wakes the spark module, which snaps the electrode 2 to 3 times a second until fire takes hold.

The dividing line runs like this. Faults you can safely correct sit on the surface: moisture, cooking residue, a cap out of position. Faults that need a technician hide underneath: the switch inside the knob, the wiring loom below the top, the module, or an electrode with fractured porcelain. Surface problems yield to drying and brushing; buried ones involve live spark voltage beside gas fittings.

## Decision Point 1: Has Anything Wet Touched the Burner in the Last 24 Hours?

Think backward through the past day. Pasta water foaming over the rim, a generous wipe-down after dinner, even damp night air sliding over the Santa Cruz Mountains into Los Gatos kitchens will coat the igniter's white ceramic tip. A wet electrode leaks its charge away silently instead of firing across the gap: endless ticking, no flame.

If your answer is yes, the job is yours and easy. Control off, grate lifted, cap and burner head set aside, everything dried thoroughly; a hair dryer on low finishes in minutes. While the parts are off, brush crumbs and sauce out of the port ring. Nearly half the igniter calls I run across 95030 and 95032 end right here, with nothing replaced.

## Decision Point 2: Was the Cap Washed and Put Back Recently?

A Wolf burner cap has one home position and no others. Set it down after washing rotated slightly, or perched on the electrode, and it can lean into the spark gap or shade the flame openings. The burner underneath, though perfectly sound, will tick forever.

The check costs 15 seconds. Lift the cap, glance at its seat, and lower it until it rests dead level and refuses to rock when nudged. Daylight under the rim means it has not found its seat. It embarrasses more good cooks around town than any other cause, usually after a deep clean, and it is a pure do-it-yourself call: no tools, no parts, no risk.

## Decision Point 3: Does One Burner Tick Alone, or Does the Whole Top Join In?

The most useful question on the list, because its answer sorts the fault for you. The sealed burners on a Wolf rangetop are all fired by a shared ignition box, meaning one soiled igniter can drag its neighbors into ticking whenever a knob opens. If lighting the back left sets off a chorus across the top, hunt for the position that never catches; dry it and brush it out, and the rest normally quiet down with it.

The reverse pattern points the other way. A burner ticking alone, lighting lazily while the others behave, has trouble in its own electrode or lead wire: technician territory. Stakes climb on the 6-burner rangetops in the hillside homes off Kennedy Road and Shannon Road, where every extra electrode is one more place for trouble.

## Decision Point 4: Do You Smell Gas, or Does Clicking Continue With Knobs Off?

Either answer ends the do-it-yourself portion on the spot. Gas first: a burner that ticks without catching is releasing unburned fuel the whole time. Shut the control, open a window, and give the kitchen 30 minutes to clear. A smell that lingers past that airing means stop entirely and pick up the phone.

Clicking that ignores the controls is the other hard stop. Ticking that carries on while every knob sits at off means a spark switch has jammed closed or moisture has crept into the harness, and the module is firing around the clock. Add any electrode with chipped porcelain, and any burner still misbehaving after drying, brushing, and reseating. Sorting out which part gave out takes spark readings, ground checks, and switch tests on a live cooktop: a job for a service visit.

## What Happens When You Do Call Someone in Los Gatos?

Ours is an independent Wolf shop, with no brand program behind it and no incentive to sell a module where a cleaning would do. Ignition trouble is the most frequent Wolf cooking request we take in town, from the Almond Grove bungalows to Monte Sereno and Blossom Hill, and after a damp winter stretch the calls stack up.

The van carries what this fault tree ends in: igniter electrodes, spark switches, and modules fitting these rangetops, so nearly every clicking complaint closes out in 1 trip. Expect a verdict you can verify; we show the meter readings as we go, and when the true fault is a modest electrode rather than the module, the modest part is what lands on the bill. Past the decision points, diagnosis itself usually takes under 20 minutes.

## Quick facts

- Local help: Los Gatos Sub-Zero Repair — (408) 402-4604

## FAQ

### The flame lights, but the clicking never quits. Can I still fix that myself?

Usually, yes. A lit burner that keeps ticking is telling you the module is not sensing flame, and the usual causes are surface ones: dampness under the cap, or a cap off its seat. Cool it, dry it, set the cap back level. If the noise survives all that, suspect the spark switch or module and hand it over.

### Can I touch the electrode without breaking something?

Gently, yes. Work on a cold burner with the control off. Lift the cap away and wipe the ceramic tip and the flame ports with something dry and soft; never submerge or spray the parts. Let everything dry before the next attempt. Porcelain showing a crack or chip is past cleaning and needs a fresh electrode.

### One dirty burner is making the whole rangetop tick. How is that possible?

Because the igniters are not independent. A single spark module drives every electrode on the cooktop, and a fouled burner anywhere can feed interference back through that shared box, setting all positions ticking at once. Sort out the burner that will not catch and the group typically goes quiet; if the chorus continues, wiring or the module is in play.

### How long should the kitchen air out after a burner fails to catch?

Give it 30 minutes with a window open and the burner off. The clicking was never the hazard; the fuel that escaped without burning is. If gas is still on the air after that period, or returns on every retry, keep the range off and book a visit instead.

### If I land on the call-a-tech side, will the repair drag out?

Rarely. Nearly all ignition work in Los Gatos wraps up in 1 visit, because the likely parts ride on the van, from electrodes and spark switches to the module itself. Cap and cleaning issues are settled on the spot, and even a module swap normally has you cooking again that afternoon.

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Independent Sub-Zero, Wolf & Viking repair. Call +14084024604. https://subzerorepairlosgatos.com/guides/wolf-range-burner-wont-light-los-gatos
