Is that the wire for thermostat or electric supply? I believe you can just replace it with copper and reuse the fiberglass insulation (it's just there for heat/fire resistance)
That's not correct. It's high temp appliance wire. Using regular wire is a good way to start a fire.
Tommy
Resistance wire wouldn't make sense here.
I think it's just your standard high temperature wire.
Something like this: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001ALK97C/?tag=atomicindus08-20
So if I don't care to keep it hot after brewing can I just go without
Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
Burnt plug I found that the studs was meltedProbably - assuming you have a working thermostat.
What is the failure that caused you to disassemble the unit?
If it does connect across the thermostat, then perhaps it is resistance wire. And that would be there to keep some current flowing through the heating element to keep the coffee warm after brewing completes.
Look at the terminations - the wire is wrapped around a post and then crimped in a lug. That is how resistance wire is terminated.
Northern colorado town called fortcollinsI believe the "rope-like" covering is asbestos insulation. No big deal.
Bring it into an specialty Appliance parts store.
Manatee91 - cannot see where your located in your profile. If you are in the midwest, I can name a few for you to go to.
Northern colorado town called fortcollins
Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
The high temperature part of the wire is the fiberglass insulation isn't it? I'm not talking about using standard wire with a plastic insulation that can melt and short out.
The wire itself is different too, not just the insulation.
Tommy
Yeah, nickle plated stranded copper. I got that. Has better thermal and corrosive properties than bare copper. That said a bare copper wire shielded by fiberglass in a coffee maker should be fine. The heating element used in a coffee maker doesn't generate enough heat to melt solid copper wire and the fiberglass insulation will prevent it from shorting out. You could probably buy a new coffee maker for the cost of a roll of appliance wire, LOL...
Wrong.
This wire is a resistor used to limit current to the heater and keep the coffee warm after brewing. If you replace it with copper as you suggest, the coffee pot will percolate continuously.
Hey, now you're talking!The problem with any home use coffee pot is that they don't get hot enough to brew good coffee. You need to get the temperature up to 130 degrees . That's the main reason coffee in a press is so much better, you boil the water before you use it. If this was about how to hotrod a coffee pot it would be better.

OK, now ya got me, what's the difference in a French press and a Italian press ?
It is actually good for you. It is a anti oxedent and as long as you drink 8oz of watter as well for every 8oz of coffee you are fairly nutral for water intakeI just realized that coffee may be the only thing that I really enjoy that isn't bad for me. My doctor also told me that, as long as you don't put anything in it, coffee is considered a clear liquid, cool !
This will be used once to make coffee for about 20 hung over 20 something year-olds at a wedding
Personally, I would just go to Goodwill and pick up another used one for $5.
Around here you spend about $20 for them at the thrift shopNot as much fun though.
Thanks for the tipHas the big day day come and gone, or is the coffee pot still on the workbench?
Because it sounds like you might have a broken nichrome wire inside that asbestos jacket.
If that is indeed the case, then there is a shadetree electrician's trick to try: gently twist the broken ends together, apply a slurry of borax powder/water, then apply power and let the joint heat up.
If you are lucky, the joint will heat to cherry red and then the nichrome wires will sort of fuse together.
I've used this to keep an old school toaster going when the heating element got severed. And, no, I did not think it would work when I first heard about it, either.![]()