Jump to content

Help - Cone Bending/ Firing Issues


Recommended Posts

This is my first time asking a question but ive often found answers o my questions on these boards... I've used kiln sitters before, years ago, and never once had problems until a bisque firing last night. I've noticed that it's been taking a bit longer to reach cone 04 in bisque and cone 6 in my glaze firings, my bisque last night took about 9 hours before I manually shut the kiln off. I could tell the sitter was close to shutting off, and I wanted to get some sleep. When I opened the kiln after cooling, the cone had bent, but it has this big bubbly blob in the bend. The bisque looks fine, but I've never seen a cone do this.. I have a small paragon s1193 kiln, and most of the firings have been perfect until the recent slowing down of the firings and this cone mishap. I've been using it since late January of this year..

 

I attached a pic of the cone 04, to see if anyone else has had this issue...

 

Thanks!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not that I'm aware of, I keep the cones in their box in a Tupperware container so I don't accidentally get glaze or anything on them. I would usually say it overfired, but then why wouldn't the sitter have shut itself off?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have  few questions

is this a small cone or bar?

any chance they got wet ever?

was the sitter rod close to a shelve?could have expanded into the sitter?or a clay piece?

It does look overfired and bloated so my guess is overfiring

Did you have a test cone (larger in load to know the end temp?

If the answer is not than get some for next fire.

Mark

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've seen a cone bloat like the one in your picture. However, it bloated because it was fired very rapidly. It was a self-supporting cone that bloated and distorted so severely that it couldn't bend. I had fired it to about 1300F in 15 minutes as an experiment.

 

I think your defective cone is a fluke and probably the only bad one in the batch.

 

Sincerely,

Arnold Howard

 

Paragon Industries, L.P., Mesquite, Texas USA

ahoward@paragonweb.com / www.paragonweb.com

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On the issue of longer fire times, how old are the elements in your kiln? or how many firings at cone 6?

I had a couple of over firings because the kiln was taking too long to get to temp and too much heat work occurred.

I'm currently changing elements!

 

The cone does look bloated.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Years ago, I had a kiln that had the setter mounted over two sections. No big deal until I overfired a load. I had the timer usually set 30 min longer than what a load would take, so not a major overfire, but significant. I checked everything out, and found that the cone had melted-slumped. I also found the setter rod was in the valley of the cone. However, because the two sections got out of alignment the setter trigger would not fall. Make certain to check everything out with the setter to make certain everything that is supposed to happen with it does.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I agree I have had cones do this in one kiln which when turned onto the highest input roared away like a freight train. The cone would bloat and melt and in so doing fix the kiln sitter needle in such a way that it would not turn off

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, can't say about the wetness as I stopped firing that kiln on high and stopeed firing to that cone almost simultaneously. Coukd have been a damp box or cone. i do from time to time readjust the pin in the sitter by inserting the gauge, through time the sitter needle does change in diameter which alters what happens.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.