Eric, have you had this problem again? Or anyone else?Quick Update: Had this burner going since March 2013 and on my 30th batch last night the internal fuse blew. I opened it up and soldered a wire over it temporarily but will have to find another fuse or breaker to replace it.
Cheers,
Eric
Eric, have you had this problem again? Or anyone else?
Asking because mine blew yesterday and I'm worried that it's an indication that there's something else wrong. Once you replaced the fuse did it continue to work as before?
I also have a question about the fuse. I had a 15 amp fuse at home and just replaced the old one and am doing a test boil. Not up to a boil yet, but it appears to be fine. What I'm worried about is that the fuse on the left is the original and the one on the right is what I used to replace it. They are very different, but I don't know enough about fuses to know what that difference is. Anyone?
Full power boil at 9 gallons - not too shabby (I may actually need to turn it down)
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Eric, have you had this problem again? Or anyone else?
Asking because mine blew yesterday and I'm worried that it's an indication that there's something else wrong. Once you replaced the fuse did it continue to work as before?
I also have a question about the fuse. I had a 15 amp fuse at home and just replaced the old one and am doing a test boil. Not up to a boil yet, but it appears to be fine. What I'm worried about is that the fuse on the left is the original and the one on the right is what I used to replace it. They are very different, but I don't know enough about fuses to know what that difference is. Anyone?
Awesome Kyle, glad you got things up and running :rockin:
Out of curiosity what kettle are you using?
Eric, have you had this problem again? Or anyone else?
Asking because mine blew yesterday and I'm worried that it's an indication that there's something else wrong. Once you replaced the fuse did it continue to work as before?
I also have a question about the fuse. I had a 15 amp fuse at home and just replaced the old one and am doing a test boil. Not up to a boil yet, but it appears to be fine. What I'm worried about is that the fuse on the left is the original and the one on the right is what I used to replace it. They are very different, but I don't know enough about fuses to know what that difference is. Anyone?
I was having trouble locating a 15amp 250V slowblow fuse locally. Even on-line the closest I could find to the original was a 15amp 250V Ceramic-Tube, Time Delay from McMaster-Carr. I couldn't find a lot of information about the difference between the glass and ceramic tube. Also only guessing that time delay is the same as slowblow?Replace the fuse with another slowblow and continue using it, but be aware that cycling the unit at max power will degrade the life of the fuse as listed.
A kind of disclaimer here. I did do something stupid. I tried using an induction diffusion plate to even out the heat on my thin walled Bayou kettle. The Avantco threw out an over temperature error and stopped working after about 10 minutes, but recovered once it cooled down. Sent the diffusion plate back to Amazon. The fuse blew a few days after that, 10 minutes into the boil using just the kettle. Do you think using the plate earlier could have caused the fuses to weaken?It'll blow again, when I'm not sure as the current load and ambient temp in the unit will effect that lifespan, but there's not a doubt in my mind that it will.
A kind of disclaimer here. I did do something stupid. I tried using an induction diffusion plate to even out the heat on my thin walled Bayou kettle. The Avantco threw out an over temperature error and stopped working after about 10 minutes, but recovered once it cooled down. Sent the diffusion plate back to Amazon. The fuse blew a few days after that, 10 minutes into the boil using just the kettle. Do you think using the plate earlier could have caused the fuses to weaken?
Before buying my Avantco back in the beginning of 2012, I did some research and came to the same conclusion, that thin wall was actually better for induction efficiency than clad. The trouble I've had is that the "scum ring on the bottom of the pot" can turn to black scorch with a high rye content.Everyone's got an opinion - that's mine.![]()
Curious what the purpose of the grease is. Could it be there for heat transfer for the over heat sensor? Or is there another reason it's there.
At first I thought to was from recirculating while whirlpooling after the boil. I was setting the induction hob temperature to hold 170 degrees during a 45 minute hop stand. When it would cycle on, I could here a bubbling noise which I took to be the source of the scorching. But for my last rye beer, I didn't apply any heat during the hop stand and still got the scorching, so it mush have developed during the boil. This is never a problem when I've brewed with grain bills of barley or even up to 50% wheat. Only rye.AFA the scorching, I can see where that would be an issue - is it happening on the recirc or during boil? I've had issues with rye also, but I've never scorched a batch.
If others want to prevent a blown fuse should we just not run it at 3500 watts? Or does that really have no affect?
If the receptacle is 30A, they should have used 10-2 wire. More than enough. If you have room in your panel, replace the 30A 120V breaker with a 20A 240V breaker and change the wall receptacle to a 20A 240V (NEMA 6-20R). Make sure there is nothing else on the circuit!
I don't know if you consider this work to be "easy-ish"? :cross:
What would happen if I used a 2 pole 30a breaker?
Also is a 120v/240v breaker what I'm looking for? I can't seem to find one that is strictly 240.
Will it work? Sure, but if the receptacle is the 20 amp NEMA 6-20R that this induction hob uses, you should have a 20 amp breaker in the panel.Nothing wrong with a 30 amp breaker as long as you are using #10 wire.
Will it work? Sure, but if the receptacle is the 20 amp NEMA 6-20R that this induction hob uses, you should have a 20 amp breaker in the panel.
Isn't the induction unit internally fused? If so, I wouldn't be concerned about running it on a 30a circuit.
All equipment must have its own protective device, you certainly can't rely on the breaker in the main panel to protect each appliance that is connected to that circuit, it is sized to protect the wire. Lets say that you try connecting two 120 v. 1500 watt toasters to a 20 amp circuit, it will exceed the rating of the wire and trip the breaker.