Originally Posted by
Don42
Nice job! Luck for us that PID controls have become so incredibly affordable. They weren't always so.
I don't make blades but I did make a PID controlled oven like yours for other lab endeavors. The reason PID control is so much better for this is because the "bang-bang" (on-off) thermostats can have hysteresis of as much as 40 degrees difference as they cycle, meaning that the temp where it switches on can be 40 degrees cooler than the temp where it switches off. The PID control switches the power on and off at a much faster rate, with cycle times of seconds. They use solid state relays because an electromechanical relay would soon wear out. PID controls work by adjusting the percentage of time that the power is on each cycle so the process variable (temperature here) matches the setpoint. Most PID controllers can be made to "auto tune", which means they can "learn" how the particular oven behaves so it will reach setpoint as quickly as possible without overshoot and without oscillating. Once thus tuned, they'll "remember" the internal settings indefinitely until you change them manually or make it autotune again. One must RTFM to discover how to do this with a particular controller. There are at least three variables: proportional gain, integral gain and differential gain. Old PID engineers use different terminology.
I also made a PID "flat iron" using the 600-watt element from a 30-cup coffee maker I got at Goodwill for $5 and a piece of 1/2" aluminum jig plate for the body. That was for laminating heat-sensitive films.
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