Need advice on pottery kilns
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1 | Maybe someone here can help me - I am interested in pottery and have the opportunity to buy an 2 cubic metre electric kiln 2nd hand. The trouble is it hasn't been fired up for about 30 years. I don't know much about kilns and haven't had a chance to look it over so would be buying it 'as is', although the outside looks fine. I'm not sure how much it would cost to repair because I don't know about that stuff, but I'm wondering if the costs to repair all the potential problems (worst case scenario) like elements and thermostat is going to be sky high. Should i take a chance and buy it for repair or is there potentially not much price difference between a complete overhaul and a brand new kiln? spoeklet - 2020-10-06 15:55:00 |
2 | buy a new kiln elements are expensive to replace by an electrician I have had an old kiln which took endless hours to reach temperature. or alternatively join a pottery group and hire their kiln occasionally. centaurus2 - 2020-10-09 15:11:00 |
3 | A 2cuft kiln for a Potter would be useless.Those sized one were made for ceramic painters and would not get up to the Temparature needed to fire raw clay. axelvonduisberg - 2020-10-09 16:49:00 |
4 | Cool - thanks. It would be for porcelain dolls too but sounds easier just to buy a new one spoeklet - 2020-10-09 17:25:00 |
5 | You say you are "interseted in pottery" my MIL did it for years and owned her own kiln, which was 2 phase power and expensive to run. Edited by bill1451 at 11:28 am, Sun 25 Oct bill1451 - 2020-10-25 11:26:00 |
6 | Kiln's are straight forward to restore either brick or fibre construction, I wind my own elements and do a lot of manual to automatic controller conversions, best to get a Sparky to look at it and quote, you don't know until you ask :-) most home kilns are all single phase limited to a 32A circuit, with good insulation not expensive to run, approx $10-15 each firing... good luck! itaddict - 2020-12-07 18:45:00 |