If that's how you want to do it go for it. But I wouldn't seek advice or approval here after the fact.The meter wires are wrapped around and soldered to the 8awg right before those go into receptacle.
The cable will be attached to wall once cover plate is installed. I know it should be sheathed, but considering its short length & protected location, I decided not too.
Yeah, kilns do come with massive cables and plugs. Our smallest kiln, which could run off an extension cord, is cabled like it's a 200 amp welder.26a kiln. Might be pulling 26a for over 3hours. Therefore 35a breaker and 8, not 10 awg. Kiln came from factory with 6-50 plug and 6awg cord. Confirmed w\factory it pulls max 26a and since it is a resistance load i measured resistance with dvm. 9.3 ohms.
The meter wires must be fine, cause the kiln manufacturers stuff the meter wires in with the mains wires. And they would never do anything sketchy.
As for exposed NM. Absolutely stick it in some conduit, or something. The **** nicks like it's made of butter.
Accidentally bang a mold or shatter a piece of bisque against that NM and you'll be signing up for conduit.Ill consider the conduit, tks
Dont understand about the kiln manu comment. Is yours a newer kiln with electronic control? Ours has a sitter.
Then that's more of a no. Kiln wiring gets warm. There are days when things don't go right and I've seen kiln connections heat up enough to melt solder. Mechanical connections only. Crimp that meter wire into eyelets, then crush the eyelet into the wire clamp on the receptacle.This is my gurls kiln, so I don't know much about them. She knows more, but not much. Just from using them in class where they were against the wall with no clearance.
I thought electronic kilns had no sitter. Her two have sitter and a heat setting knob. Nothing else.
My solder is outside of the receptacle clamp. Look closely at pic.
Wait a minute....I did not ask for advice approval. Is this electrically correct and safe? I am open to advice or suggestions.
.i knew Id get hit with that. Keep things in context. That was my reply to "If that's how you want to do it go for it. But I wouldn't seek advice or approval here after the fact." So, I stated "I didnt ask for advice or approval (in my OP). Is this electrically correct and safe? I am open to advice or suggestions."Wait a minute....
that set of statements contradicted itself.
first you say that you are not asking for advice and then you ask for advice and you end by saying you are open to advice?![]()
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BTW - what is a "gurl"? my spell check doesn't recognize it
ps - I have found that "temporary" and "I'll fix it later"usually means "forever"
the receptacle box is on cinder block wall about 3 feet above the kiln. This is on its own circuit and its breaker is located 15 feet away in the breaker box. The meter right above the receptacle monitors ambient temperature at the receptacle box.Where is that black interface box located relative to the heat of the kiln? It's won't last long at any sort of elevated temperature.
Is that the terminal box for the kiln? If so, no electronics belong in there.
Consider a disconnect attached to the wall and a properly rated whip to connect the kiln to the disconnect. Put the metering circuitry in the disconnect. An inexpensive air conditioning disconnect would work.
I'm still not sure what is shown in your photos. I see an electronic interface on a white panel. Is that your meter?the receptacle box is on cinder block wall about 3 feet above the kiln. This is on its own circuit and its breaker is located 15 feet away in the breaker box. The meter right above the receptacle monitors ambient temperature at the receptacle box.
The PS is to everybody - me included. This is GJ, it never hurts to throw in a "reminder" for the masses.I dont know if your PS refers to me, because i have found that temporary or later often means PERMANENT or NEVER.
It's a bit no-no to solder wires under a screw terminal. The solder will cold flow, and that screw terminal will loosen up over time because of that.The meter wires are wrapped around and soldered to the 8awg right before those go into receptacle...
that is back of meter with its wiring diagram above the receptacle. White metal is electrical receptacle box cover.I'm still not sure what is shown in your photos. I see an electronic interface on a white panel. Is that your meter?
What is that panel? Where is that panel? Does it see temperatures greater than room temperature?
the solder didnt cold flow. I know how to properly heat both metals as i apply solder. my solder is not anywhere near the receptacle screw terminal.It's a bit no-no to solder wires under a screw terminal. The solder will cold flow, and that screw terminal will loosen up over time because of that.
The right solution would be to slip both the wires together into a crimp sleeve/ferrule, crimp it, and put that under the screw. No solder.
Seriously, I thought it was the brand name of the kiln.My internet search: Gurl is Alternative form of girl.
That is for two or more receptacles. Still looks like i comply.FYI- #8 NM-b is limited to 40a. Breaker should be changed to 40a. A 6-50r can be on a circuit protected with 40a breaker… see T210.21(B)(3)
YesBreaker can be sized below wire rating,no?
If you have a 35a breaker, that's fine for 8nm, no argument there.I did a lot of research in choosing my breaker and wire sizes. I sure hope I didnt f up there.
the meter wires are wrapped around the 8awg diameter and twisted to themselves tightly to make a good physical connection. Then soldered for good measure. I really dont see an issue unless that area got hot enough to melt the solder, which it wont.
What is the voltage rating of the breaker are you using?That's 8awg to a 240 vDC
That's good info, but did you really think that this was a DC circuit?What is the voltage rating of the breaker are you using?
The voltage rating of an AC breaker is greatly reduced when using it on DC.
For instance, a 250V AC circuit breaker can be used for up to ~60V DC. A 125V AC circuit breaker is only good for ~30V DC.
The AC current switches direction (in the US, 60Hz), and because DC is constant, the arcs are longer and will burn the contacts in the breaker up.
Edit>> 600V AC circuit breakers have a 250VDC rating.
It's not a matter of heat control. If you had a proper solder joint, solder will wick between the strands of the 8 gauge wire (if you don't have enough heat to do that much, then you'll have a cold joint that's even more dangerous for other reasons). Ideally, a mechanically clamped connection should be very similar to a crimped termination, where the screw deforms the copper enough that all air within that ring is squeezed out, leaving you with a cross section of nothing but a "solid" copper "rod" compressed by the fitting. This generally behaves nicely over time (ignoring oxide jacking or if someone were dumb enough to swap out the screw for a steel one), with thermal cycling eventually ending with the connection settling to an elastic state.the solder didnt cold flow. I know how to properly heat both metals as i apply solder. my solder is not anywhere near the receptacle screw terminal.
Im now considering and researching crimp sleeve/ferrule.

There are multiple issues here, and I'll just go and guess that he's talking about a 250V NEMA 6-50, since NEMA describes neither 240VAC connectors nor DC specific connectors at any voltage. Note that the NEMA 6 series is 250V rated (with minimum 300V dielectric strength), but not specific to DC or AC (1,2, and 5 series are also not AC specific, while the NEMA 7 series and up are specific to AC). This Hubbell chart is the best I've seen (most NEMA charts you find online are chock full of errors, so beware):Re: "240 vdc NEMA 6-50 Receptacle"
I'm not going to bother reading all of the back and forth banter, so maybe it's already been answered. #8 NM (romex) is considered TW or UF so breakers for it are sized using the 60° column which will tell you it's a 40 amp breaker max.Two or more
That is for two or more receptacles. Still looks like i comply.
I dont see wire size listed there.
Yes I did. I wouldn't have posted it if I didn't.That's good info, but did you really think that this was a DC circuit?
I should have said "some" 600V breakers. The point is no breakers listed for 250V is listed for use with that voltage.Another breaker at my desk (Square D JGA36225) has a 600VAC rating and 250VDC rating