|
www.TK560.com Vacuum Forming, Movie Prop, Sci-fi and GIjOE Forum
|
|
|
View previous topic :: View next topic |
Author |
Message |
remarque Newbie
Joined: 06 Oct 2006 Posts: 22 Location: The Carolinas
|
Posted: Thu Nov 30, 2006 10:01 pm Post subject: Oven, all of the coil is not on |
|
|
After looking at the oven tutorial on TK650, I started wiring mine. My oven is smaller than the one he designed. I plugged it up and filp the switch, the coil starts to heat up then all of a sudden a piece of the coil breaks off. It broke off between connection C and D if you look at the James Thurston Design.It broke off at the connection C and D if you look at the James Thurston Design. After that I removed all the coil and rewired it with another coil, but I disconnected connection C because I though it may be to much for the short span of wire. When I go to turn this one the connection C and D doesnt even heat up but all the other surrounding do.
Also I'm not using coil from infrared heaters, I'm using the coils from a dryer heating element. They can in about 3ft length uncoiled.
Can someone give me a hand in rewirng my oven? |
|
Back to top |
|
|
dman Novice
Joined: 09 Oct 2006 Posts: 34
|
Posted: Fri Dec 01, 2006 12:32 am Post subject: |
|
|
The reason that the wire heats up is basically because it is shorted. To have a short, it must be hot to ground (or nuetral). Hooked up properly, it must go hot-nuetral-hot-nuetral (A-B-C-D-etc). If you disconnect one of the wires, it no longer shorts on that section and therefore will have no current running through it because you have 2 hots or two nuetrals together. |
|
Back to top |
|
|
jegner Site Admin
Joined: 30 May 2003 Posts: 2144 Location: Texas, USA
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
drcrash Guru
Joined: 04 Sep 2006 Posts: 705 Location: Austin, Texas
|
Posted: Fri Dec 01, 2006 1:03 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Quote: | Also I'm not using coil from infrared heaters, I'm using the coils from a dryer heating element. They can in about 3ft length uncoiled. |
Unless the nichrome is the same gauge as the 22-gauge stuff Thurston James specifies, you need to take the different resistance into account.
If you have or can borrow an ohmmeter (or volt-ohm meter, or multimeter), you can measure the resistance of the coil you've got, and figure out how it differs, and compensate for it by using more or less coil to get the same resistance per segment.
(If your nichrome is too thick, you may find that you need more coil than it's worth, and you should buy some 22-gauge from somebody here who's got extra.)
Harbor Freight has a $10 "multi-tester" (multimeter) that's on sale for $3 right now. Presumably it's not the best-built, most robust device, but it would probably do the trick.
Paul |
|
Back to top |
|
|
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group
|