Technology and regular maintenance
May. 15th, 2008 09:58 amLast night, she made more beads, and everything was worked properly. When I got up this morning, I noticed that her shop was at 82F, so I figured she'd left the heater on, and I'd turn it off on my way to work. Then I looked out the window above my computer, where I can see her kiln. It's power light was on continuously (the light comes on when the controller supplies power to the furnace, so it should be blinking), and the kiln was glowing bright orange around the bead door.
At some point during the cool down part of the cycle, after she had gone to bed, the relay welded itself again.
I just ordered a new relay to replace the current one, and I ordered a second relay to wire into the alarm circuit of the controller to act as an overtemperature limiting relay and cut the power when the controller goes above the specified alarm temp. Mechanical relays are only good for about a million cycles. We're going to start replacing the main relay every year as a maintenance item, and I'm going to try to clean the relay contacts every three months to help limit contact resistance.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-15 03:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-15 03:21 pm (UTC)The kiln, fortunately, is well designed and sited to minimize fire risks. The elements fail at around 1050C, limiting the maximum amount of heat it can generate, and there's about a 2" air gap between the kiln itself and anything flammable around it. The first fault, though, did scorch the bottom of the wood mandrel holder that had been sitting on top of the kiln.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-15 04:41 pm (UTC)She's lucky to have such high-quality on-site tech support.