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- This topic has 15 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 5 years, 10 months ago by
Iain Muir.
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May 17, 2020 at 10:03 pm #97644
Iain Muir
ParticipantThe oven is working fine but it takes a full 15 minutes (timed, not estimated) to get the empty oven up to 180⁰C. Why might this be? I think it only has one element (though I may be wrong) so I would expect it to heat up normally or not at all. Can an element partially fail? Thanks.
May 17, 2020 at 10:06 pm #468791electrofix
Moderatorlook on the label inside the door and post the compete prod number should be 11 digits 9 plus 2 extra
Dave
May 17, 2020 at 10:44 pm #468792Iain Muir
ParticipantThanks Dave. There’s nothing quite in that format but what there is is:
Model Code: PNC 944 181 059
S-No: 83641817
Type: 56 BJB 39 GAMay 17, 2020 at 11:19 pm #468793electrofix
Moderatorthis oven is bascally a conventional oven that is fan assisted. A true fan oven has a circular element around the fan
you oven relies on 2 elements. The grill element and another one below the floor that you cant see. Its not unusual for the bottom one to fail then it takes ages to heat up as the remaining element struggles to produce enough heatbuilt around 1996, not a bad age, not much today would last that long
you need to do some checking to confirm this is the fault
lower element seems to be available
https://shop.ukwhitegoods.co.uk/8996…r-oven-elementDave
May 18, 2020 at 7:15 am #468794Iain Muir
ParticipantThanks Dave, that certainly sounds like what the problem is!
Iain
May 19, 2020 at 7:45 am #468795Iain Muir
ParticipantI’ve removed and tested the element – it’s a double element unit. There’s no sign of physical damage and there’s continuity in each element though quite widely differing resistance. One element, marked 500W at 230V has a resistance of around 100 ohm, which adds up, the other which is marked 600W at 86V (rather surprisingly) has a resistance of around 13 ohms, which again is about right.
So, it looks like that double element is OK. The grill element works fine – as a grill at least.
Any other ideas about slow heating? Thanks.May 19, 2020 at 8:57 am #468796electrofix
Moderatorwell it could be the switch behind the knob. the lower element may not be energised
try turning it on and see how quick the floor of the oven gets hot. It will get warm by reflective heat from the grill element but it should get really hot
Dave
May 19, 2020 at 12:57 pm #468797Iain Muir
ParticipantThanks for your help. The oven floor is heating up, but whether it’s one or both elements I can’t tell. Why are there 2 elements, and one rated at 86V, anyway?
May 19, 2020 at 1:16 pm #468798electrofix
Moderatorthink they use the other one in series with the grill element to stop it grilling everything so now the check is
does the grill element get hot in oven mode. we know it works in grill modeDave
May 21, 2020 at 8:01 am #468799Iain Muir
ParticipantYes, Dave, the grill warms up in fan oven mode too.
The oven has a multitude of functions: fan, convection, grill, grill with fan and one I’m not sure about! (the symbol is an asterisk with a water-drop below it). I suppose the double element is to enable that wide range to be provided, though in what combination I can’t guess. Perhaps only one of the floor elements is being energised instead of both when set for fan/convection oven. That’s something I could test if I knew that both elements should be energised.May 21, 2020 at 8:15 am #468800electrofix
Moderatorare you checking the top element in the grill / fan setting or the oven setting as they are wired differently
fan.grill is grill element on full power plus a fan. oven setting uses one of the lower elements to lower the grill element output so it does not grill the food
the water drop symbol will probably be fan only with no heat which can be used to defrost food
Dave
May 21, 2020 at 9:50 am #468801Iain Muir
ParticipantI checked it in oven mode – so top and at least one bottom element working OK. I guess the 86V element will be the one in series with the grill when in oven mode to reduce grill heat (reflecting voltage drop caused by grill element), and that the 230V lower element will also be energised in oven mode. So in oven mode, both lower elements should be energised…
May 21, 2020 at 9:56 am #468802electrofix
Moderatoryes but one will be fed with 240v the other because its in series will have a lower voltage
but if both elements are working in oven mode there is no reason why its taking that long to heat up. the only long shot and it does not happen often is there is a break in one of the element that opens when it gets hot
Dave
May 21, 2020 at 10:47 am #468803Iain Muir
ParticipantOK. I’ll get round to testing it sometime in the next few days. If one isn’t being energised, and no obvious fixable reason for it, I guess a new ‘mode selector’ (or whatever it may be called) will be needed, if available. Thanks again for your help.
May 21, 2020 at 10:51 am #468804electrofix
Moderatorsounds like a plan
Dave
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