Speed Queen Washer NF Error Code — What It Means
The NF code stands for No Fill. Your Speed Queen washer ran its fill cycle but the control did not detect a sufficient rise in water level during the allowed time window, typically around 15 minutes. The machine stopped the cycle and threw the code because it concluded water was not entering the tub fast enough or the incoming water was not being sensed correctly.
This is a fill problem, not a drain fault. The control expects to see the water level climb within a set period after it commands the inlet valve to open. When that expected change does not happen, the washer flags NF and stops to prevent a failed wash or potential overflow condition.
Common Causes
- House water valves closed or partly closed The hot and cold shut-off valves behind the machine are not turned fully open, starving the washer of supply pressure and flow.
- Kinked or pinched inlet hoses Hoses are bent, crushed, or twisted behind the washer, restricting water flow into the machine.
- Clogged inlet screens or filters Sediment, mineral deposits, or debris have blocked the fine mesh screens at the inlet valve or inside the hose couplings.
- Faulty water inlet valve or solenoids The valve assembly or its internal solenoid coils are stuck, weakened, or failing to open fully when the control energizes them.
- Low household water pressure Insufficient supply pressure or flow from the building plumbing cannot deliver water fast enough to satisfy the machine’s fill timer.
- Control board or wiring harness fault The main control is not sending correct voltage to the valve, or broken wiring or a failed relay is interrupting the signal.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Unplug the washer for 60 seconds to reset the control, then plug back in and try a fill cycle to see if the code was a one-time glitch.
- Check both hot and cold faucets behind the machine and turn them fully counterclockwise to the wide-open position.
- Inspect the inlet hoses for kinks, twists, or crushing where they exit the back of the washer or connect to the wall valves, and straighten any restrictions.
- Remove the inlet hoses from the back of the washer and pull out the small mesh screens or filters from each valve port, rinse under water to clear sediment, and reinstall.
- Reconnect the hoses, run a fill test, and verify that water flows strongly into the tub within the first minute or two of the cycle.
- Test the water inlet valve by listening for a click or hum when the cycle starts, or use a multimeter to confirm the control is sending voltage to the valve coils during fill.
- Replace the inlet valve assembly if screens are clean, supply is good, voltage reaches the valve, but fill remains weak or absent, then retest the cycle for normal operation.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Water inlet valve assembly | Amazon | Primary replacement when screens and supply are good but the machine still will not fill or fills very slowly. |
| Inlet hose screens (filters) | Amazon | Small mesh inserts at the valve ports that may need replacement if cleaning does not restore flow. |
| Water-level pressure sensor or switch | Amazon | Less common; replace only if fill volume is normal but the code persists and valve operation is confirmed good. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a qualified appliance technician if you have verified that both supply valves are open, hoses are clear, inlet screens are clean, and the washer still throws NF with little or no water entering the tub. A professional can test the inlet valve coils with a multimeter, check control-board outputs and relay function, inspect the wiring harness for breaks or corrosion, and diagnose water-level sensing circuits that may be giving false no-fill readings. Also call if you are uncomfortable working with plumbing connections or electrical testing, or if your washer is under warranty and DIY work would void coverage.