What 2-4 Blink Pattern means (viking dishwasher 2-4)
A viking dishwasher 2-4 blink pattern is a High Level fault. Viking dishwashers (verified on the 451 Series) have no numeric display — instead, faults are shown as a two-light blink pattern: the Pots/Pans light flashes to give the first digit and the Normal Wash light flashes to give the second. The control sees too much water in the tub, which it treats as an over-fill risk, so it stops and may run the drain pump. An inlet valve that does not close, or a drain that cannot keep up, are the usual causes.
Symptoms to look for
The signs below help confirm you are dealing with this condition rather than a different fault on your Viking Dishwasher. You may see one of them or several together, and they can build up gradually or appear suddenly after a power event, a long door opening, a spill, or recent service.
- The lights flash in a 2-4 pattern
- The drain pump may run to clear excess water
- The cycle aborts
- There may be water pooling in the base
Common causes
Several different faults can produce these symptoms. Working through the most likely causes in order helps separate a quick, owner-level check from a problem that needs trained service and the correct Viking parts.
- Inlet valve stuck open — water keeps entering the tub
- Restricted drain — the tub cannot empty fast enough
- Level sensing fault — the sensor reads high
- Control fault — the board mismanages fill and drain
Troubleshooting steps you can try
Work through these checks in order before calling for service. Stop wherever you are unsure, or where high-voltage parts, gas, the sealed refrigeration system, or a compressor are involved, and hand the rest to a qualified technician.
- Turn off the supply tap and switch the dishwasher off at the breaker.
- Clean the base filters and confirm the drain is clear.
- Do not keep running cycles while water is over-filling.
- Because an over-fill can leak, book service to test the inlet valve.
Parts a technician may replace
Depending on what the diagnosis shows, a technician may inspect, test, or replace the water inlet valve, level sensing, drain pump, and control board. The correct part for your Viking Dishwasher is matched from the model and serial number, and genuine Viking components are fitted through trusted parts suppliers rather than generic substitutes so that performance, safety, and the appliance’s long working life are all protected. Confirming the failed part before ordering avoids replacing more than the fault actually requires.
When to call a technician
A 2-4 pattern needs a technician to test the inlet valve, level sensing, and drain path and replace the failed part. When the fix calls for trained service, book a visit through our scheduling page and an experienced, qualified technician will diagnose and repair it.
Prevention and care
Regular care keeps this condition from returning on your Viking Dishwasher. Keep filters, vents, seals, and the condenser, exhaust, or burner path clean, avoid overloading or blocking airflow, check that doors and seals close cleanly, and follow the Viking maintenance guidance for your model. Because this unit relies on electronic control, protect it with a stable, correctly rated power supply and have any built-in installation done to Viking specification so the control never sees an out-of-range condition. If a code appears, note exactly what was shown before you reset the appliance — that record helps the technician reach an accurate diagnosis and avoid replacing parts unnecessarily. Where stored food or wine, a sealed refrigerant system, gas, water on the floor, or a safety lockout is involved, treat the condition as a reason to act quickly rather than wait.
Related help and Viking resources
Browse other Viking Dishwasher diagnostics, read about Viking Dishwasher repair, look up your unit in the Viking models reference, or the related 2-2 fill timeout fault, or schedule a service visit. For Viking manufacturer documentation and model lookup, visit the manufacturer at vikingrange.com.