I have a question about what might be a good reflective thermal insulator for the project under discussion? I am planning on modifiying a similar project and thought of using firebrick but would rather use a reflecting insulator as to not hold the heat as firebrick would. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Kim
________________________________
From: rkbradshaw1 <
rkbradshaw1@...>
To:
Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2012 1:42 PM
Subject: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: Thermal insulation for a toaster oven
One thing you need to consider is that firebrick will hold the heat for a while. This will incease your cool-down and not provide much help on the warm-up since the thermal mass of the brick will take some of the energy. This will be true of most insulators other than reflective.
Since you want to control the time at temperature your money might be better spent on a PID controller for your existing oven.
Thanks,
Randy
--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "ftkalcevic" <frank@...> wrote:
>
> I'd like to improve the efficiency of my cheap toaster oven.
>
> I suspect it is like all ovens - a thin sheet metal oven in a thin sheet metal enclosure. And no thermal protection around the control electrics.
>
> I'd like to use a thermal insulator, either wrapped around the oven, or just something stuffed into the gap between oven and shell. I'd also like to protect the gap on the right where electronics will go.
>
> Any idea what kind of cheap insulator I can use for that? I've used ceramic blanket before, but a strip 50mm wide was very expensive.
>
> Is household fibreglass insulation wool capable of withstanding the 300C+ temps?
>
> Thanks,
> Frank
>
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