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OT: 7-sided kilns ?

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N_Cook

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Jul 4, 2015, 4:43:44 PM7/4/15
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I was talking to a kiln-repairer this week. He'd recently refurbished a
couple of these
http://www.hobbyceramicraft.co.uk/kilns-paragon-fusion-7-glass-fusing-kiln
He did not know and I could not see why the manufacturing awkwardness of
7 sides?
Just some sort of gimmic or some sensible firing reason to have
non-symmetry of firing or something?

whit3rd

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Jul 6, 2015, 5:46:49 AM7/6/15
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On Saturday, July 4, 2015 at 1:43:44 PM UTC-7, N_Cook wrote:
> I was talking to a kiln-repairer this week. He'd recently refurbished a
> couple of these
> http://www.hobbyceramicraft.co.uk/kilns-paragon-fusion-7-glass-fusing-kiln
> He did not know and I could not see why the manufacturing awkwardness of
> 7 sides?
Maybe just size. You can use the same size side panels to make different
kilns, and the 7-sided one shows as 14.5 inches, while the eight-sided one
is 16.5 inches.
Maybe they're cutting bevels on standard-size firebricks.
Alternately, if one were to mold the sidewalls as planks with
an outie-circular edge and innie-circular opposite edge, they'd
be easy to mortar together at any angle.

John Robertson

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Jul 6, 2015, 9:46:22 AM7/6/15
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Well, if you want to get technical, the kiln is actually 8-sided. It has
a hexagonal box, then a base and a lid. Perhaps only seven sides have
heating elements (not the bottom) - hence the name.

The hexagonal shape will heat items inside more evenly from the sides
than a box shape.

Beyond that I have no suggestions.

John :-#)#

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N_Cook

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Jul 6, 2015, 4:37:03 PM7/6/15
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Standardizing the size of the panels makes sense if destined for either
a 110V or 240V country , as would only be run in parallel , if an odd
number of panels. Kiln cement covers up all sorts of irregularities,
like angled vertical gaps between panels, and refactory bricks can
easily be cut, likewise.

Clifford Heath

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Jul 6, 2015, 8:45:22 PM7/6/15
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On 06/07/15 23:44, John Robertson wrote:
> On 07/04/2015 1:43 PM, N_Cook wrote:
>> I was talking to a kiln-repairer this week. He'd recently refurbished a
>> couple of these
>> http://www.hobbyceramicraft.co.uk/kilns-paragon-fusion-7-glass-fusing-kiln
>>
>> He did not know and I could not see why the manufacturing awkwardness of
>> 7 sides?
>> Just some sort of gimmic or some sensible firing reason to have
>> non-symmetry of firing or something?
>
> Well, if you want to get technical, the kiln is actually 8-sided. It has
> a hexagonal box, then a base and a lid.

Count again. There are seven vertical sides, a bottom and a top.

N_Cook

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Jul 7, 2015, 7:30:51 AM7/7/15
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Perhaps with standard voltage and wattage and size panels then a
12-sided kiln having 12 panels would be 3x the power of a 4 panel one,
probably not far off the requirement. Anything else can be cattered to a
great extent, in the on/off programming temperature control
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