Have you noticed all the epic builds on YT comes from normal folks like this and not the ones with thousands of dollars of equipment in a seperate shop with bubinga wood cabinets. This dude is in his slippers at night with hand tools. Awesome work
Beautiful work. You brought together several disciplines, welding, sheet metal work, electrical, control systems, kiln knowledge; and executed them all masterfully. Great job.
Finally someone that uses a limit switch and grounds the enclosure. There are way to many build videos where people have no idea how to handle electricity. The connection between the wire and kanthal on the back should also be in an enclosure, since that is a live wire.
Hey I am having problems setting up my electric kiln, can someone help me out please, I am using REXC100 PID, 2500W heating element, SSR 40 0-32DCV and a LED transformer 20-40DCV....it gets going for a few minutes but then the heating elements stop heating can someone help me please
@@leonbarnes1402 because of the high surface resistance the risk is very low, however a switch of that kind is sure to tank the oven performance when it most needs it
@@AlessioSangalli id have thought the only time you would open the door is when your adding knives or removing them. you wouldnt need to keep opening it mid heat treat as you bake them for a set time.
A couple TIPS; 1. Try to use a thermometer that is made out of steel. Ceramic thermometers tend to break faster. And when they are exposed to high heat, they don’t measure as well. 2. Use more insulation. Preferably high heat ceramic wool. Now your oven needs to work longer to get to a certain temp. Best combination is using those white high heat bricks and ceramic wool. Plenty of it. But for the rest, very nice build!
This is one of the best builds of something I've watched. I liked your precision cutting/fitting/welding... the unit looks so pro. Thanks for the inspiration.
That was a beautiful build! Any time I see "DIY" in a video title, I expect things to look DIY. This looks like a quality product, and the details in the video were perfect. Quality content, right here!
Man are you serious? That's like some world class piece of equipment you just built! I could probably duplicate it, but I get lost in the electrics and electronics department. Incredible job, incredible video!
@@brandysigmon9066 indeed I believe I could if I knew how to wire the electronics, but but without having specific guidance it wouldn't matter how much I took my time, I would not be able to do it properly. I would require a step by step visual video or live guide because I do not understand electronic and wiring schematics that are in printed diagram form, unless they are very specific and explanatory and they rarely are easy to understand unless you are well versed in these things to begin with. But thanks you for the vote of confidence 🙂
Jamal69 Jackson I’m the same way, I can build just about anything in the world, but when it comes to wiring and electronics I am screwed. I don’t understand electrical schematics at all unless they’re written in crayon and explained to me like I’m a 3 year and then I’m still at a loss!!!
@@randomguyfromtexas1185 lol, then we understand each other. But yeah man, I would need a course in understanding wiring schematics for me to ever decipher them.
You are a terrific fabricator, the world could use more like you. It's an acquired skill not being picked up by as many younger folk with bright minds like yourself. Keep making the most of your available resources, and I hope you enjoy a long, productive life's journey - Great work!
Very nice workmanship! I’ve got one that looks very similar, but is about 50 years old (I upgraded it with a PID controller / solid state relay about 10 years ago). Mine is ready for new fire brick, and a new steel shell. I’m going to put a slab of steel in the bottom of mine so that the steel’s thermal mass maintains even temperature. These ovens tend to fluctuate a bit, especially when opening and closing the door. Again, outstanding workmanship and thank you for sharing this video.
SHOW OFF👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻great job!!!!!!!! I usually can’t sit and watch videos from start to finish, but I watched every second of this one and some spots I rewound and watched some parts multiple times. Seriously, what a fantastic job!!!!
Thank you very much, with the video and list of materials I will be able to build mine, it will be 1/3 the value of a similar industrialized equipment, greetings and thanks from this young Brazilian blacksmith.
Thanks AV that was at a totally different level, From the design to the build, execution to the detailing, right down to the vid itself brilliant, thanks so much. Loved it all.
Wow, 1000 degrees from a 13a wall plug! The one at my work would just about get up to 500 and that used a 32a circuit. If I try making my own gears I'll definitely build one of these! Thanks for the video! It's going in my favourites!
What a top notch job! Definitely the best on UA-cam! Can you provide a link or more detailed information on the particular Type K Thermocouple you used. What are the specs for it? Thanks for making such a great video!!
@@mrsensable it's that thing we do where the brand name become the generic name. A good example is the Jacuzzi; that's a generic name for a hot tub, but also a brand of hot tub. The two words are interchangeable. That is an interesting point though.
I have never seen a 240v PID before.....I don't know why, but I always run mine on 12V. If I had to give a reason, I'd say it's that I want to limit high voltage AC to as few places as possible, where I know that 12VDC won't kill me if I touch the wrong thing. I do really appreciate seeing which wire you used as a heating element.
That was amazing, well done, love your attention to detail not only does the kiln look fantastic , your video was really well constructed and that’s evident in the absolute absents of words….. really well done , you should be very proud of your skills👍
Some one who checks the Ohm Resistance of their run of Kanthal~!!! And heat sinks on the relays With heat transfer goo~!! And a power cut off door switch~!! I'm impressed~! It's been what well over a year now. What would you have done differently? larger box? Thicker insulation? different electrical controls? How has the ink bird PID worked out for you? Does it let you Ramp over time up and down? I did like the scratch stock trick you used to make the slots. How long does it take to come up to the critical temp for the steels you use?
I’ve ruined 1 and only 1 too loose a t-shirt and some pretty serious abdominal skin abrasion from 7” wire wheel grab ... I wear an apron when grinding ALL the time now. Safety is not a joke.
My hat is off to you. Very professional looking. I just ain't got the wattage between the ears to figure this stuff out. If you ever think of doing a step by step set of instructions for purchase, let us know. And if you need a tester to see if the instructions are dyslexic idiot proof, I'm happy to lend my easily confused assistance. :)
The contactor on the door is the "limit switch" ? It's meant to shut down current in heating elements when the door is open to prevent electrocution ? Very amazing result, very professional.
It stops the heating if the door is open. Prevents the element from burning out should the door be left open. Also reduces the visible and thermal radiation making it easier to access.
@@joshyingling you will if you allow it to become heavily oxidized and it snaps whilst you're loading the thing. Running any electrical kiln with full flow oxygen will burn the elements out in no time. The high heat creates continuous positive pressure which prevents high levels of oxygen rich air accessing the chamber. With the door open, with no interlock, it'll simply cycle the air from below to above and oxidize. The spring wires become brittle, snap whilst heating up and dislodge during loading. Ceramic kilns have the interlocking system for just the same reason after quite a few ceramicists were found slumped, dead, in the workshops. No BS... I've worked with, built and maintained ceramic, glass and enamelling kilns for 20 years 👍
@@sebastienc8797 thanks buddy 👍 You can cut kiln brick inserts that sit over the wires. Without pictures (I wish YT allowed picture comments!!!) it's difficult to explain. Imagine the channels being drilled through a brick... then you cut the brick so that you cut the hole in half. These are then held in place using, usually, high temp ceramic rods. This means that the elements are contained within their own atmosphere and the chamber can be left open. Great for small kilns for enamel work where you're constantly moving a piece to get the right look. Mostly these are very small chambers (150mm3) and you load them from the underside. The top is very heavily insulated (minimum of 200mm brick topped with fleece) and the kiln sits on legs. You could totally apply this to a forging kiln... just upscale it an be sure to seal around the kiln brick sandwich with high density kiln board. 👍 Asbestos used to solve a lot of these issues... but killed loads of people (painfully) so we use a generic refractory fibre and cement now; compressed in a mould to get the correct forms and thickness. 👌
WOW لقد فاجأتني فعلا لم اظن بأنك ستستعمل الريزيستانس كماده للتدفئه لان شكل القالب الذي صنعتة يشبه الشودير الى حد بعيد شكرا لكم على هذا الفيديو المفيد والرائع
I've been subscribed for awhile and just had to say thank you for the brilliant work, beautiful knives, and other builds. Truly a pleasure to watch and most definitely inspirational. Keep up the great work. Last but not least I love this build. It's professional grade.
Well, first of all congratulations because it is the best video I have seen in you I had in the construction of an oven, totally professional and a work of art, I wanted to ask you what material are the meshes that you put on. Thank you
Never seen any of your videos before but that was an instant subscribe. I don’t understand why you got any thumbs down. I’d buy an oven off you any day.👍
Excellent video. You really know what you are doing. I have an oven (from Efco) without a thermostat and I want to build one in it so that I can tell the oven 'heat up to temperature x for y time' but I know nothing about electricity and I find it very hard to understand. I was hoping that you could perhaps explain a little. Best regards, Dordi, Sweden
Questions: 1.How much refractory cement you used for that project (i mean in bottles) 2.How many meters you used for that 1.2 wire? 3.What type of cable you used for electronic?
Very nice oven ! A few points to think about, still: red grid is beautiful and...useless around the oven. The electrical box is also beautiful and...bulletproof (necessary ?), it is sufficient to make it from wood plates, keeping the electronics away from direct heat from the oven. Just keep metallic plate for the SSR to help dissipate its heat. Then about your electrical schematics: beware that you have no true insulation mean for your heating resistances, as you are only cutting one wire (supposedly the phase) and you are then directly touching "neutral" side if you get in contact with a resistance inside the oven. Adding a double channel contactor driven by the switch that is driven by the door of the oven is the solution.
That’s a high quality made. Please, where to get the kind of insulation cord for the door? Thanks Is there a way to share the exact list of material used in the video?
It was so interesting to watch the process of building the oven. How much time do you spend to plan such a project? Is it your invention or adaptation? All those details are so considered.
Do you have a part number for the switch and the connector from controller and Kanthal wire? I know everyone has said it already but this is the best one I have seen on here but, it's the first I've seen with a cutoff switch and the Kanthal connector. Nice work on this and your knives!
Have you noticed all the epic builds on YT comes from normal folks like this and not the ones with thousands of dollars of equipment in a seperate shop with bubinga wood cabinets. This dude is in his slippers at night with hand tools. Awesome work
Beautiful work. You brought together several disciplines, welding, sheet metal work, electrical, control systems, kiln knowledge; and executed them all masterfully. Great job.
Finally someone that uses a limit switch and grounds the enclosure. There are way to many build videos where people have no idea how to handle electricity.
The connection between the wire and kanthal on the back should also be in an enclosure, since that is a live wire.
Hey I am having problems setting up my electric kiln, can someone help me out please, I am using REXC100 PID, 2500W heating element, SSR 40 0-32DCV and a LED transformer 20-40DCV....it gets going for a few minutes but then the heating elements stop heating can someone help me please
Why the limit switch? You mean the one that turns off the system when the door is open? Why is that desirable?
@@AlessioSangalli so you dont electricute yourself if you touch a knife against the heater wire
@@leonbarnes1402 because of the high surface resistance the risk is very low, however a switch of that kind is sure to tank the oven performance when it most needs it
@@AlessioSangalli id have thought the only time you would open the door is when your adding knives or removing them. you wouldnt need to keep opening it mid heat treat as you bake them for a set time.
A couple TIPS;
1. Try to use a thermometer that is made out of steel. Ceramic thermometers tend to break faster. And when they are exposed to high heat, they don’t measure as well.
2. Use more insulation. Preferably high heat ceramic wool. Now your oven needs to work longer to get to a certain temp. Best combination is using those white high heat bricks and ceramic wool. Plenty of it.
But for the rest, very nice build!
S type thermocouple is excellent
Electric circuit please
Best hardening furnace I've seen on YT ... greetings from Germany ...
Hey man, that has to be the nicest homemade heat treating oven I have ever seen !!! Congratulations!
Thank you very much!😊
I agree , nice work !
For real man! I've seen quite a few people make their own heat treating oven, this surpasses all of them by miles!!!
What steel are you using to Secure the heat element inside?
That's what I was going to say
Probably the best homemade heating oven I’ve ever seen
This is one of the best builds of something I've watched. I liked your precision cutting/fitting/welding... the unit looks so pro.
Thanks for the inspiration.
Excellent work
That was a beautiful build! Any time I see "DIY" in a video title, I expect things to look DIY. This looks like a quality product, and the details in the video were perfect. Quality content, right here!
Very professional looking. Looking forward to some to some Stainless steel knives.
Thanks man!
Me too😀
Man are you serious? That's like some world class piece of equipment you just built! I could probably duplicate it, but I get lost in the electrics and electronics department. Incredible job, incredible video!
You can build one, just take your time
@@brandysigmon9066 indeed I believe I could if I knew how to wire the electronics, but but without having specific guidance it wouldn't matter how much I took my time, I would not be able to do it properly. I would require a step by step visual video or live guide because I do not understand electronic and wiring schematics that are in printed diagram form, unless they are very specific and explanatory and they rarely are easy to understand unless you are well versed in these things to begin with. But thanks you for the vote of confidence 🙂
Jamal69 Jackson I’m the same way, I can build just about anything in the world, but when it comes to wiring and electronics I am screwed. I don’t understand electrical schematics at all unless they’re written in crayon and explained to me like I’m a 3 year and then I’m still at a loss!!!
@@randomguyfromtexas1185 lol, then we understand each other. But yeah man, I would need a course in understanding wiring schematics for me to ever decipher them.
Anyway I can get a link to the parts used. I would love to make a killer brick pizza oven. One that can handle 12 pizzas at once. All electric
You are a terrific fabricator, the world could use more like you. It's an acquired skill not being picked up by as many younger folk with bright minds like yourself. Keep making the most of your available resources, and I hope you enjoy a long, productive life's journey - Great work!
Extremely impressive. You, Sir are a joy to watch in action.
This has got to be the best looking kiln I have ever laid eyes upon. Kudos sir.
Very nice workmanship! I’ve got one that looks very similar, but is about 50 years old (I upgraded it with a PID controller / solid state relay about 10 years ago). Mine is ready for new fire brick, and a new steel shell. I’m going to put a slab of steel in the bottom of mine so that the steel’s thermal mass maintains even temperature. These ovens tend to fluctuate a bit, especially when opening and closing the door.
Again, outstanding workmanship and thank you for sharing this video.
SHOW OFF👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻great job!!!!!!!!
I usually can’t sit and watch videos from start to finish, but I watched every second of this one and some spots I rewound and watched some parts multiple times. Seriously, what a fantastic job!!!!
Ur fitment skill is phenomenal
Beautiful work!! You are an excellent professional! I'm Brazilian, sorry if I have misspellings. Congratulations for the work 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
THIS is the nicest oven I ever seen anyone build 2 thumbs up to you.
Thank you very much, with the video and list of materials I will be able to build mine, it will be 1/3 the value of a similar industrialized equipment, greetings and thanks from this young Brazilian blacksmith.
I wish i could replicate this. They cost soo much. Seriously good job Mate!
Absolutely incredible build, only problem is your skills are wayyyyyyyy above what the average DIY can achieve!
Excellent craftmanship. You can be justifiably proud.
Thanks AV that was at a totally different level, From the design to the build, execution to the detailing, right down to the vid itself brilliant, thanks so much. Loved it all.
Nice build like the handle design.
Wow, 1000 degrees from a 13a wall plug! The one at my work would just about get up to 500 and that used a 32a circuit. If I try making my own gears I'll definitely build one of these! Thanks for the video! It's going in my favourites!
What a top notch job! Definitely the best on UA-cam! Can you provide a link or more detailed information on the particular Type K Thermocouple you used. What are the specs for it? Thanks for making such a great video!!
This happens when an artist becomes an engineer!
I really neet to build one of these myself. Beautiful craftsmanship
Absolutely beautiful.
First we had the Gough jig, now the hobbyist will have the AV oven.
Actually Aaron coppied the sandpaper jig off another fella.
@@mrsensable it's that thing we do where the brand name become the generic name. A good example is the Jacuzzi; that's a generic name for a hot tub, but also a brand of hot tub. The two words are interchangeable.
That is an interesting point though.
Beautiful craftsmanship
This is the best video if the kind that I have ever seen. I wonder if you can give us details about wiring and setting up the PID.
There are many tutorials on youtube about how to set the PID loop. Just pick the temp controller, some come with instructions and videos.
Its pleasure to see this kind of precise work, Share this kind as much as possible.
Wow, amazing build. Very professional result, well done
Потрясающая работа! Шикарное исполнение!
Don't forget to wear a good dust respirator and not just a paper mask. Silica/alumina dust does cause lung damage.
I work on commercial ovens for a living and this is pretty legit! Just don't let that element zap you since it's exposed! Well done though
Thanks man!
It has limit switch on the doors,so it wont...
@@AVmake that's right, good call. great job!
Great build 👌 After my belt grinder this is my next Projekt for easy heat threatment.
Thank you!
Definitely must have tool for knifemaker.
I have never seen a 240v PID before.....I don't know why, but I always run mine on 12V. If I had to give a reason, I'd say it's that I want to limit high voltage AC to as few places as possible, where I know that 12VDC won't kill me if I touch the wrong thing. I do really appreciate seeing which wire you used as a heating element.
Awesome JOB Love the design. I might use some of your techniques to build a forge
in youtube of all ovens, yours was the best. The unique advice that i can give you, its use gloves and mask, because those bricks are really toxic
That was amazing, well done, love your attention to detail not only does the kiln look fantastic , your video was really well constructed and that’s evident in the absolute absents of words….. really well done , you should be very proud of your skills👍
so good. so good. you should draw up some plans!
Some one who checks the Ohm Resistance of their run of Kanthal~!!! And heat sinks on the relays With heat transfer goo~!! And a power cut off door switch~!! I'm impressed~! It's been what well over a year now. What would you have done differently? larger box? Thicker insulation? different electrical controls? How has the ink bird PID worked out for you? Does it let you Ramp over time up and down? I did like the scratch stock trick you used to make the slots. How long does it take to come up to the critical temp for the steels you use?
Nice build!
Watch those hoodie strings near the angle grinder, though. That grinder is looking for something to grab so it can eat your face.
Paul Ste. Marie my very first thoughts as well, not only will it eat your face but the rest of your head.
It'll just tear the strings of the hoodie. Ask me how I know........
Joe Hammond would you wanna bet your life on it?
I already did. Can I borrow some new hoodie strings?
I’ve ruined 1 and only 1 too loose a t-shirt and some pretty serious abdominal skin abrasion from 7” wire wheel grab ... I wear an apron when grinding ALL the time now. Safety is not a joke.
Awesome oven!
Soon we’ll see some beautiful knives heat treating in there!
My hat is off to you. Very professional looking. I just ain't got the wattage between the ears to figure this stuff out. If you ever think of doing a step by step set of instructions for purchase, let us know. And if you need a tester to see if the instructions are dyslexic idiot proof, I'm happy to lend my easily confused assistance. :)
What a beauty.A work of art.
Awesome workmanship well done!
So clean and simple great job!
Absolutely beautiful! Well done, hope it serves you well into the future.
Excelente Trabajo!!! Y mano de obra!!! Saludos desde Argentina.🇦🇷🇦🇷🇦🇷
Nevermind the oven, them two screws are the real gods.
Beautiful piece of work!!!
BEST I have seen!!!
Very very nice Job!..Please take care whith the electrical saw and jacket laces.
Excellent build! Best looking heat treat oven on UA-cam.. great job!
Preciso al millimetro, efficace e geniale ... mani che sanno cosa fare. Grande ! !
This is incredibly satisfying and soothing to watch. Thank you.
The contactor on the door is the "limit switch" ? It's meant to shut down current in heating elements when the door is open to prevent electrocution ?
Very amazing result, very professional.
You won't get electrified from heating elements to begin with.
It stops the heating if the door is open. Prevents the element from burning out should the door be left open. Also reduces the visible and thermal radiation making it easier to access.
@@joshyingling you will if you allow it to become heavily oxidized and it snaps whilst you're loading the thing. Running any electrical kiln with full flow oxygen will burn the elements out in no time. The high heat creates continuous positive pressure which prevents high levels of oxygen rich air accessing the chamber. With the door open, with no interlock, it'll simply cycle the air from below to above and oxidize. The spring wires become brittle, snap whilst heating up and dislodge during loading.
Ceramic kilns have the interlocking system for just the same reason after quite a few ceramicists were found slumped, dead, in the workshops.
No BS... I've worked with, built and maintained ceramic, glass and enamelling kilns for 20 years 👍
@@hesperhurt very complete answer. Thank you !
There is no solution to prevent the resistance to be oxydised ? Coat it with a cement ?
@@sebastienc8797 thanks buddy 👍
You can cut kiln brick inserts that sit over the wires. Without pictures (I wish YT allowed picture comments!!!) it's difficult to explain. Imagine the channels being drilled through a brick... then you cut the brick so that you cut the hole in half.
These are then held in place using, usually, high temp ceramic rods.
This means that the elements are contained within their own atmosphere and the chamber can be left open. Great for small kilns for enamel work where you're constantly moving a piece to get the right look. Mostly these are very small chambers (150mm3) and you load them from the underside. The top is very heavily insulated (minimum of 200mm brick topped with fleece) and the kiln sits on legs.
You could totally apply this to a forging kiln... just upscale it an be sure to seal around the kiln brick sandwich with high density kiln board. 👍 Asbestos used to solve a lot of these issues... but killed loads of people (painfully) so we use a generic refractory fibre and cement now; compressed in a mould to get the correct forms and thickness. 👌
Awesome build! Thanks from the USA!
Just an absolute joy to watch your videos. So clean and simple yet elegant. This heat treating oven build will truly inspire others. Well done :)
Thanks man!
Glad you like it 😀
You, sir, do amazing work.
Great design and construction.
Great job, i love it.
You did a GREAT WORK!!!!! Clean, well built and nice to see! BRAVO! Cheers from 🇮🇹
You should be proud. That’s one class job. Thanks for sharing.
WOW لقد فاجأتني فعلا لم اظن بأنك ستستعمل الريزيستانس كماده للتدفئه لان شكل القالب الذي صنعتة يشبه الشودير الى حد بعيد
شكرا لكم على هذا الفيديو المفيد والرائع
No, talks, nor music, but anyone can easily.
Congratulations
I've been subscribed for awhile and just had to say thank you for the brilliant work, beautiful knives, and other builds. Truly a pleasure to watch and most definitely inspirational. Keep up the great work. Last but not least I love this build. It's professional grade.
Very nice work! That is first rate DIY! Thanks for the video.
Super nice build.
Beautifully done.
Fantastic build. Nicest I’ve seen so far! Bravo!!!!
Now that was a nice, really nice build !
Well, first of all congratulations because it is the best video I have seen in you I had in the construction of an oven, totally professional and a work of art, I wanted to ask you what material are the meshes that you put on. Thank you
Very, very nice oven. Thank you for all the information you posted on the description. Great job!
very good manual work
A professional job.
Very precision work man, i like this 👍
love the look, fine craftsmanship there. I'd pay you to build one for me.
Never seen any of your videos before but that was an instant subscribe. I don’t understand why you got any thumbs down. I’d buy an oven off you any day.👍
Браво!
Молодец!
Высший клас,очень умело.
Вы заслужили похвалу!Ваше мастерство достойно науки.
Добра Дорогие Друзья
This piece has pristine manufacturing quality
cool stuff! you have inspired me. Thanks! Great video....so much better than TV!
Great design and construction
I don't often leave comments but this looks siiick!!! Wow!
Would love to see you make some carbon steel knives like they used to that's when Knights had knives .
WOW!!! I think everybody needs this oven. Please share some technical details. It's looking very creative. Or maybe you can sell like this oven.
Excellent video. You really know what you are doing. I have an oven (from Efco) without a thermostat and I want to build one in it so that I can tell the oven 'heat up to temperature x for y time' but I know nothing about electricity and I find it very hard to understand. I was hoping that you could perhaps explain a little. Best regards, Dordi, Sweden
How is it going? I would advised you the thermostat and schemes for it, but it's all from Russia))
CONGRATS MY FRIEND!
Awesome build - is there a Model Number for the PID and Thermal couple
Excellent work
That came out great! I'm curious as to how much you spent on materials?
Questions:
1.How much refractory cement you used for that project (i mean in bottles)
2.How many meters you used for that 1.2 wire?
3.What type of cable you used for electronic?
Very nice oven ! A few points to think about, still: red grid is beautiful and...useless around the oven. The electrical box is also beautiful and...bulletproof (necessary ?), it is sufficient to make it from wood plates, keeping the electronics away from direct heat from the oven. Just keep metallic plate for the SSR to help dissipate its heat. Then about your electrical schematics: beware that you have no true insulation mean for your heating resistances, as you are only cutting one wire (supposedly the phase) and you are then directly touching "neutral" side if you get in contact with a resistance inside the oven. Adding a double channel contactor driven by the switch that is driven by the door of the oven is the solution.
Just an awesome VERY professional job! 👏👏👏👏👍👍👍👍👍👍
Excellent work. Bravo. What is that red mesh you put on?
That’s a high quality made.
Please, where to get the kind of insulation cord for the door? Thanks
Is there a way to share the exact list of material used in the video?
Benoit Haddad that cord can be picked up at almost any hardware store. Just ask for wood stove door seal. Comes in tons of sizes.
Same cord as for Anthracite heater.
Very nice precision work.
It was so interesting to watch the process of building the oven. How much time do you spend to plan such a project? Is it your invention or adaptation? All those details are so considered.
Do you have a part number for the switch and the connector from controller and Kanthal wire? I know everyone has said it already but this is the best one I have seen on here but, it's the first I've seen with a cutoff switch and the Kanthal connector. Nice work on this and your knives!