I'm in progress of converting my old built in electric oven for use as a powder coating oven. Reason it was replaced is that the control board went bad, and obsolete. So I am going to build my own control system. I have a PID, Thermocouple, and contactor. Should be enough for basic control bells and whistles can be add if needed. A Power on light may be good. Don't see a need for a timer at this point.
That said I have never powder coated before. But WTF I'm in.
So I'm comfortable doing the building of the control. Not to say that I won't have more questions, but I am comfortable and safe enough that I'll get it done.
That may seem pretty cocky after this question.
Are electric oven elements 220 volt? Seems to me that they would have to be 220. But the OEM wiring suppling both elements (Bake, Broil) is 16-gage.
My Fluke meter tells me that my Bake element is 27.4 Ohms resistance. If I use 230V in the calculator I found it tells me that I will draw 8.39A, 1,930.65W
Broil element is 17.9 Ohms resistance. 12.85A, 2,955W
If I plug in the same numbers @ 120v of course the amperage looks more appropriate to the 16-gage.
So I have to ask how could a 16-gage wire handle those amperages? Or have I misunderstood something simple?
As another point of information, the OEM supply wires coming from the oven are 12 gage line, 16 neutral.
That said I have never powder coated before. But WTF I'm in.
So I'm comfortable doing the building of the control. Not to say that I won't have more questions, but I am comfortable and safe enough that I'll get it done.
That may seem pretty cocky after this question.
Are electric oven elements 220 volt? Seems to me that they would have to be 220. But the OEM wiring suppling both elements (Bake, Broil) is 16-gage.
My Fluke meter tells me that my Bake element is 27.4 Ohms resistance. If I use 230V in the calculator I found it tells me that I will draw 8.39A, 1,930.65W
Broil element is 17.9 Ohms resistance. 12.85A, 2,955W
If I plug in the same numbers @ 120v of course the amperage looks more appropriate to the 16-gage.
So I have to ask how could a 16-gage wire handle those amperages? Or have I misunderstood something simple?
As another point of information, the OEM supply wires coming from the oven are 12 gage line, 16 neutral.

