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Oven end-users often struggle with equipment that no longer meets their current production or process needs. “Should we replace our existing equipment with a new oven or repair, retrofit or rebuild the existing equipment?” is a familiar refrain.
Like many other products that must be heated, an electric motor stator has areas of high mass and materials of construction that are sensitive to overheating. What is the best way to heat such a part without creating defects?
One of the cardinal rules of heat transfer, whether it's by convection, radiation, conduction or any combination of these, is that the more load surface you expose to the heat source, the faster you'll be able to heat it.
One of the cardinal rules of heat transfer, whether it's by convection, radiation, conduction or any combination of these, is that the more load surface you expose to the heat source, the faster you'll be able to heat it.
Energy supplies are getting tighter and prices are certain to reflect it. All we can hope is that it doesn't get as bad as it was back in the late 1970s and early 1980s when plants faced supply interruptions and consumption caps. A lot of companies did nothing until they were figuratively dropping off the bridge. Then panic -- not coherent plans -- became the word of the day.