Thats not what I meant by heat resistant wire on the outside.. I mean use wire able to resist heat say 200C rated. not, a resistance element wire. So even now I have the kiln working without fault (ok, just for 30mins) do I need to add to the circuit as you suggest?You must not have the extra element outside the furnace as it will get very hot and you will need to put it in an earthed box with a fan to keep it cool.
It worries me that you appear to have one end of your element outside the furnace. This looks very dodgy to me.
Not sure what part you are looking at but its a pretty standard way of doing it the element is attached on the inside to bolts which come through the back of the kiln and connected with heat resistant wire. This is then housed to prevent touching the live stuff.
The thing hanging down is the thermocouple
There is a interlock which kills the power of the element when the door is open which resquline kindly helped me with the wiring, thank you.
You said that stretching the element fixed the problem, so it's possible what happened is that you had some of the element shorted out, reducing the resistance of the load and thus drawing too much current.
Yes it is working after stretching it out more. How would a 'short' occur in this curcuit? (or 'a' circuit)
Pretty pleased with the fact that is working really, however if its potentially a fire risk because of to much amps? then clearly I would need to think about modifying it.
But if the draw is too high won't it cut the power rather than cause a fire? I know if your wiring cannot handle the current then it can cause a fire but I have used thick enough wires only the plug is possibly under spec.
to find the current W/E=I ... so 3220(W)/240(V) = 13.416666(Amps)
to find the resistance E/I=R ... so 240(V)/13.416666(Amps) = 17.888199(Ohms)
find current W/R=I 240(V)/17.888199(ohms) = 13.416666(Amps)
multimeter says 15.1Ohms.
Sorry for the long post just trying to answer others questions and ask a few of my own.
Last edited: