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  1. In Topic: Paragon Electric Kiln - voltage?

    Posted 8 May 2013

    View Postpub58pottery, on 08 May 2013 - 10:52 AM, said:

    so i got this kiln for free and im not sure what the voltage should be - the tag on the outside say 220 but saw 110v elsewhere and then the outlet plug just throws me


    The A-66B requires a 4-wire, 120/240 volt, 30 amp circuit with a 14-30R receptacle. The kiln uses 120 volts on Low and Medium and 240 volts on High. The neutral carries current, and so the fourth wire is necessary as a grounding wire.

    Sincerely,

    Arnold Howard
    Paragon Industries, L.P., Mesquite, Texas USA
    ahoward@paragonweb.com / www.paragonweb.com
  2. In Topic: Cone offset

    Posted 3 May 2013

    View PostClaypple, on 02 May 2013 - 09:33 PM, said:

    Why do all new kilns require reprogramming? I mean the cone offsetting?
    I was glazing at ^6 on a new kiln and had a big over-firing (it went up to cone 7 instead).
    I checked the temperature and found the glazing at ^6 was programmed to go up to 2238F instead of 2199F as the manual suggested.

    Yes, I know, the Temperature is not equal to cone, it is all about the heat-work, but it was not firing for a shorter time either.
    Yes, I did the test firing with the kiln furniture in.
    I also realize that the thermocouple requires a tune-up at first, but I do not think I was off-setting the thermocouple but the final temperature programmed by the manufacture, did I?


    I would first make sure the thermocouple(s) extends into the firing chamber by the correct distance.

    The actual temperature that the kiln reached doesn't matter as much as the bending of witness cones. You could program a cone 5 instead of 6 in Cone-Fire, use Ramp-Hold mode and incrementally adjust the temperatures, or adjust Cone Offset. Adjust the controller to bend the witness cones.

    Sincerely,

    Arnold Howard
    Paragon Industries, L.P., Mesquite, Texas USA
    ahoward@paragonweb.com / www.paragonweb.com
  3. In Topic: My weird kiln won't reach temp

    Posted 26 Apr 2013

    View Postvervain, on 26 April 2013 - 07:48 AM, said:

    Now, I know there are a number of troubleshooting threads on here about kilns not reaching temperature, but my problem is a little more complicated. See, I have an old Nova 18 kiln. Its a ceramic fiber kiln where the elements are embedded in the walls.

    I'm trying to fire to cone 6, and have successfully done so many times before, but this time (probably because I have a show the first week in May, and hey, what could stress me out more?) it will. not. reach. temp. And it is SO CLOSE.


    I think your elements are starting to age. If I were you, I would fire the kiln only to lower temperatures.

    Sincerely,

    Arnold Howard
    Paragon Industries, L.P., Mesquite, Texas USA
    ahoward@paragonweb.com / www.paragonweb.com
  4. In Topic: Hold Limitations on Electric Kiln ?

    Posted 17 Apr 2013

    View PostStephen, on 17 April 2013 - 02:17 PM, said:

    I have a glaze firing schedule programmed in my kiln controller (Bartlett) that goes to cone 6 and holds for 15 minutes and then ramps down. I just assumed that the electronics monitors the temp and then once cone 6 is reached the elements are turned on and off to achieve a hold at that cone 6 temp for 15 minutes. Are you saying that instead it just continues to whatever temp the elements are capable of achieving for 15 additional minutes and then starts the ramp down?


    The temperature during a hold remains steady. It shouldn't increase. However, the clay will continue to absorb heat work during the hold. This can actually fire the clay to a higher cone than the one that you have programmed. Typically, 45 - 60 minutes of hold = one additional cone of heat work.

    Sincerely,

    Arnold Howard
    Paragon Industries, L.P., Mesquite, Texas USA
    ahoward@paragonweb.com / www.paragonweb.com
  5. In Topic: Hold Limitations on Electric Kiln ?

    Posted 17 Apr 2013

    View Posttimbo_heff, on 17 April 2013 - 01:32 PM, said:

    Question probably for Neil.

    Someone was told by one of the kiln companies not to do a hold for more than 30 minutes at high temperature... that it would destroy elements or some such thing.
    Sounds like misinformation to me. I could imagine a long hold being extra work for the relays but does anyone know what the kiln maker might have been talking about?


    You can hold at lower temperatures for extended periods without harming the kiln. However, during a long hold, you may reach a higher cone than you had programmed. That is probably the idea behind the above advice.

    Sincerely,

    Arnold Howard
    Paragon Industries, L.P., Mesquite, Texas USA
    ahoward@paragonweb.com / www.paragonweb.com

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    22 May 2012 - 08:49
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