itsmoked
Electrical
- Feb 18, 2005
- 19,114
I've got to go look at an industrial induction heater tomorrow.
What I know:
It's an EASYHEAT 7590LI solid state induction heater.
It's less than 2 years old.
It worked great for heating a tube up for a subsequent insertion of some piece into it for shrink fitting.
I'd do ~150 pieces a day typically.
One day it started not heating as well, taking longer and longer to heat the workpiece. No material/process changes.
They sent it to the manufacturer to check. Manufacturer said there were some minor issues, certainly no show stoppers, and that they took care of them. Returned it with a clean bill of health.
Still not working.
That's all I know so far. Besides the usual suspects of bad power, damaged cables, etc., is there anything typical of induction machines that's problematic?
Skogs I know you've worked on one.
Keith Cress
kcress -
What I know:
It's an EASYHEAT 7590LI solid state induction heater.
It's less than 2 years old.
It worked great for heating a tube up for a subsequent insertion of some piece into it for shrink fitting.
I'd do ~150 pieces a day typically.
One day it started not heating as well, taking longer and longer to heat the workpiece. No material/process changes.
They sent it to the manufacturer to check. Manufacturer said there were some minor issues, certainly no show stoppers, and that they took care of them. Returned it with a clean bill of health.
Still not working.
That's all I know so far. Besides the usual suspects of bad power, damaged cables, etc., is there anything typical of induction machines that's problematic?
Skogs I know you've worked on one.
Keith Cress
kcress -