Diane wrote:Well...here I am, I finally decided on a new kiln. I went over to Marty's at Centre DeVerre and picked up my new JenKen Oval 13. After a stressfull proceedure of unloading it and getting it into the shop, it's now all set up and ready to go.
Up until now I have been using an older ceramic kiln with a pyrometer and babysat it during firings to TRY to get a good schedule.
Now I have this bright and shiney new kiln with a Bartlett controller but the manual reads like greek to me. (I'm a hands on learner)
Could one of you more experienced users help a newbie by posting or emailing me a real SIMPLE step by step guide to programing. (Kiln programing for Dummies)
Has anyone ever had a thread of firing schedules? I've tried to search the archives but haven't found too much.
Thanks for any help you can give.
Diane
Fist hit the stop button
Then enter the button called enter prog number (1-6)
next it will ask you for the number of segments xyz # then hit enter
each segment will ask for
ra (ramp rate) then hit enter
temp? (ending temperature rate for that segment) then enter
hold (0-as many hours as you want) then enter
then it will go through this same drill for all the segments and it ends with the alarm which can be 9999 if you don't want an alarm or you can enter the top end temperature (I generally us 9999 as I'm there to monitor my kiln anyway) then hit the start button and off it goes.
Lets say you have 4 segments (use your own program I'm just using this as an example not a firing schedule you'd actually have)
200 dph to 1200 then a soak of 20 min
300 dph to 1450 then a 10 min soak
9999 to 960 then an 1.5 hr soak
60 dph to 800 then off
Let's say you look at 1450 at 5 min and it's done and you want to crash cool at that point you can then tell the computer to go to the next segment by doing view segment enter,enter (2x really fast) and then confirm it went to the next segment by viewing the segment again. Then you can crash cool.
It's a really easy program and you'll not have any problems with it. I like it lot's more than the controler that's on my evenheat kiln.
Good luck,