Introduction
This manual covers the operation of the V6-CF series 700 kiln
controller. The V6-CF is a versatile controller that regulates the
temperature in your kiln so you can fire a variety of products like
ceramics, glass, or jewelry. The experienced operator can go straight to
the quick start guide. The novice can learn more about different types
of firing by reading the programming sections of the manual. In the
following pages:
- First Firing steps you through the initial firing for new kilns to
"season" the elements.
- Controller Front Panel is a visual table-of-contents for the
function of each key on the face-plate.
- Cone Fire is the quick, easy method of programming for ceramics.
- Vary Fire (also known as ramp-hold) is the versatile programming
method for writing your own profiles for glass, jewelry and ceramics.
The other sections of the manual will answer questions about what to
expect during a firing.
Precautions
The controller is used to control temperature, it is not a safety
device.
Do not operate the controller in temperatures above 125 °F.
Never leave your kiln unattended at the end of a firing.
The controller contains electronic components which are sensitive to
static electricity. Before handling the controller dissipate any static
charge you may have by touching metal or a screw on the controller
panel, the electrical box, the kiln lid, or some other grounded object.
Always check the position of the thermocouple probe before starting a
firing. The current temperature displayed on the controller is measured
at the end of the thermocouple.
Always review the current program before firing to ensure the correct
profile is programmed.
Ensure the kiln and the areas around the kiln are clear of
combustible material. See kiln manufacture's recommendation on required
clearances.
Controller Front Panel
|
START-STOP button for
starting and stopping firings. VARY-FIRE programming for
setting and saving your own firing profiles.
OPTIONS section for
setting delay start and alarm. Set one of nine "Other" options:
Default resetr, Preheat stage time, Controller ID, 16 segment
program, Cone offset, Change *F to *C, set Error codes off, set
T/C offset, check board temperature. |
 |
LED DISPLAY - four digit display
showing times and temperature. NUMBER KEYS section for entering
temperatures and times.
CONE FIRE section for choosing one of
four preset cone fire speeds.
VIEW section to look up cone
temperatures, review the selected program, view the current
segment, or skip to the next firing segment. |
Quick Start
- Read all precautions before using your controller.
- Apply power to the kiln/controller
- Clear the display and get to the idle mode by pressing ENTER.
- Program the controller.
- Review the program before firing to ensure the correct program is
ready to fire.
- Press Start. -On- will be displayed and then the kiln temperature.
The relays and elements will be cycled on and off to regulate the
temperature according to the program.
- At the end of the firing the controller will flash the current
temperature, firing time, and CPLt. Press ENTER to return to the IdLE
state.
IMPORTANT PROGRAMMING NOTE: Before
initiating a firing profile or performing any other function, the
current temperature must be flashing. Pressing the "1" key will clear
the display of errors ('Err') or 'FAIL'.
In most cases when programming, you will choose an option, then press
"ENTER" to accept the option. After programming is complete press the
"START/STOP" button to begin the firing.
With the display flashing 'IdLE' and the current temperature, you are
ready to proceed to one of the programming sections.
The CONE FIRE mode uses Orton's patented method to achieve correct
heat work so it is ideal for firing ceramics. The advantage of using the
CONE FIRE method is that a very complicated firing profile may be chosen
with just a few key strokes. The CONE FIRE method helps protect against
over and under firing by carefully tracking and controlling the
temperature at the end of the firing as the cone temperature is
approached. The final temperature is adjusted according to the final
firing rate. For example, as the heating elements age and the heating
rate slows, the final temperature will be adjusted downward to ensure
the correct amount of heat-work.
The VARY-FIRE mode can be used for ceramics, glass, jewelry, glazes,
decals, etc. It allows you to create your own firing profiles which can
be saved and used over and over.
Programming
1. CONE FIRE
The CONE FIRE mode allows you to fire to a cone number with one of four
different speeds.
To use CONE FIRE:
- Make sure the temperature is flashing. Pressing the "1" key will
clear the display of errors (Err) or FAIL.
- Press one of the 4 firing speed buttons (see Appendix A to see the
ramp speeds)
Slow Bisque - Used for setting a slow bisque firing profile.
** 13 hours to fire to cone 04. **
Fast Bisque - Used for setting a fast bisque firing profile.
** 10 hours to fire to cone 04. **
Slow Glaze - Used for setting a slow glaze firing profile.
** 7 hours to fire to cone 04. **
Fast Glaze - Used for setting a fast glaze firing profile.
** 4 hours to fire to cone 04. **
- Press ENTER.
- Type the cone number you want (acceptable values are from .022 to
10).
If you type a wrong number, press "0" 3 times or until all zeros
appear in the display, press ENTER, then type the correct number (only
three digits are displayed at this time)
- Press ENTER.
- Type the hold time at the end of the firing or leave at zero
- Press ENTER. 'CPL' will be displayed briefly, then the current
temperature will be flashing in the display.
- Press START/STOP to begin firing.
NOTE: With any of the CONE FIRE modes, a
preheat stage is available. During the preheat stage the temperature
is increased at a rate of 60°F per hour until 200°F is reached; the 200°
temperature is then held for the programmed amount of time. Preheat is
automatically set to zero during cone fire programming and at the end of
each firing, so if a preheat stage is wanted, it must be reprogrammed
before each cone firing. See SECTION 4 - "OTHER" options for programming
"Preheat".
CONE FIRE Example
Slow Bisque Firing, Pre-heat 1 hour, Cone 04, 10 minute Hold -
Use the following steps for a bisque firing to cone 04, a 10 minute
temperature hold at the peak temperature, and a preheat stage with 1
hour hold time.
| Step |
Press |
Display |
Comment |
| 1 |
Slow Bisque |
S-bC |
If you press the wrong button, before pressing ENTER, simply
press the correct button. |
| 2 |
ENTER |
alternately flashing:
ConE & No. |
Slow Bisque is now selected. The word ConE and the last entered
cone number will alternately flash on the display. Now enter the
cone number - 04. |
| 3 |
0, 4 |
alternately flashing:
ConE & 04 |
The word ConE and the entered cone number will alternately flash
on the display. If you type a wrong number, press zero 4 times, then
type the correct number. |
| 4 |
ENTER |
alternately flashing:
HLd & 00.00 |
The cone number has been accepted. Now enter the 10 minute hold
time. |
| 5 |
1, 0 |
00.10 |
Numbers to left of decimal point are hours, to the right of
decimal point are minutes. If you type a wrong number, press zero 4
times, then type the correct number. |
| 6 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes, then the current temperature |
The 10 minute hold time is accepted. CPL indicates the firing
profile has been completed. |
| 7 |
OTHER until PrHt displayed |
PrHt |
Press OTHER until PrHt is displayed. If you accidentally pass
PrHt press "OTHER" several more times until PrHt appears again. |
| 8 |
ENTER |
alternating flashing:
HLd & 00.00 |
Preheat has been selected and the hold time is to be entered
now. |
| 9 |
1, 0, 0 |
01.00 |
Numbers to left of decimal point are hours, to the right of
decimal point are minutes.
NOTE: For a 1 hour hold time you
could also enter 60 for 60 minutes; the display would show 00.60. If
you type a wrong number, press zero 4 times, then type the correct
number. |
| 10 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes, then current temperature |
Accepts a hold time of 1 hour, then CPL indicates the preheat
stage has been completed. |
| 11 |
START/STOP |
-On- |
After -On- is displayed for several seconds, the heating
elements of the kiln will cycle on and the current temperature in
the kiln will be displayed.
If a time is displayed instead of the current temperature, then a
delay start is in effect. If you do not want to delay the start
press START/STOP button, then DELAY, then 0000, ENTER. When the
current temperature again flashes in the display, press START/STOP. |
2. VARY-FIRE
The V6-CF has 6 vary-fire user programs to store and reuse. Each
program has from 1 to 8 segments (2 - 16 segments if 16-s option is on).
Each segment has a firing rate, a soak temperature and a hold time. It
is best to write out the firing profile that you plan to program before
you begin programming. To ramp at the maximum rate either up or down,
enter a rate of 9999. To program a down ramp, you enter the rate/hour
then a temperature below the previous segment temperature.
NOTE: The first ramp rate of any user
program
The following example is a two segment program stored in memory
location "user 1".
| Segment |
Rate °F/hour |
Temperature |
Hold |
| 1 |
100 |
200 |
0 |
| 2 |
500 |
1575 |
0 |
VARY-FIRE Example
The following steps are used to program "user 1" program for the firing
profile above.
| Step |
Press |
Display |
Comment |
| 1 |
ENTER PROG |
alternately flashing:
USEr & No. |
The display alternates between USEr and the last selected user
number. |
| 2 |
1 |
1 |
Selects user (USEr) profile number 1 |
| 3 |
ENTER |
alternately flashing:
SEG & No. |
The displays flashes between SEG and the number of segments
which were previously programmed |
| 4 |
2 |
2 |
This is the number of segments needed for our example |
| 5 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing:
rA 1 & No. |
The display flashes between rA 1 and the heating rate per hour
that was previously programmed |
| 6 |
1, 0, 0 |
0100 |
Displays the selected rate/hour |
| 7 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing:
°F 1 & No. |
The display flashes between °F 1 & the temperature previously
programmed |
| 8 |
2, 0, 0 |
0200 |
Displays the selected temperature |
| 9 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing:
HLd1 & No. |
The display flashes between HLd 1 & the hours and minutes which
were previously programmed |
| 10 |
0 |
00.00 |
If display does not show 00.00, press 0 until 00.00 is
displayed. |
| 11 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing:
rA 2 & No. |
The display flashes between rA 2 & the heating rate previously
programmed |
| 12 |
5, 0, 0 |
0500 |
Displays the selected rate/hour |
| 13 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing:
°F 2 & No. |
The display flashes between °F 2 & the temperature which was
previously programmed. |
| 14 |
1, 5, 7, 5 |
1575 |
Displays the selected temperature |
| 15 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing:
HLd2 & No. |
The displays flashes between HLd2 & the previously selected hold
time. |
| 16 |
0 |
00.00 |
No hold time. |
| 17 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing: ALAr & No. |
The display alternates between ALAr & the previously used alarm
setting. |
| 18 |
9, 9, 9, 9 |
9999 |
Enters the temperature at which the alarm will sound. The alarm
will be turned OFF with a setting of 9999. |
| 19 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes then the current temperature |
CPL flashes several times indicating the program has been
completed. The current temperature then flashes in the display. |
RECALL PROGRAM is used to recall a previously programmed firing
profile.
Example: To recall user program #5, use the following:
| Step |
Press |
Display |
Comment |
| 1 |
RECALL PROG |
Alternately flashing:
USEr & 1 |
The controller is ready to accept the desired user number. |
| 2 |
5 |
5 |
Indicates the user program selected. |
| 3 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes then the current temperature |
CPL flashes several times indicating the program has been
selected. . The current temperature then flashes in the display. |
3. VIEW SECTION
View Section - Contains buttons to look up Cone Temperatures, Review
programs, View current segment and Skip segments during firings.

The VIEW section allows you to view various information
about cone temperatures, firings, and settings.
Cone Table - Used to look up the temperature of
various cone numbers. The temperature which is displayed is for
self-supporting cones with a heating rate of 108°F/hr. TO use, press
"Cone Table", enter the cone number you want to look up, press "ENTER";
the cone temperature will be displayed followed by CPL.
Review Program - The information displayed when Review Program
is pressed varies depending on whether you are using Cone Fire or Vary
Fire. When Review Program is pressed, each of the steps in the current
firing profile is displayed one after another changing every 1/2 second.
In Cone Fire Mode - The display will show the selected firing
profile in the following order:
- cone fire speed
- preheat time (PrHt)
- cone #(ConE)
- cone temperature* (°F)
- hold time (HLd)
- delay time (dELA)
- alarm setting (ALAr)
- error codes on/off (ErCd)
- LAG setting (if zone control)
*After a firing is complete, the cone temperature (°F) will show
the actual temperature reached during firing.
In Vary Fire Mode - The display will show in the following
order:
- the user program # (USEr)
- the number of segments (SEG)
- 1st ramp rate (rA 1)
- 1st segment temperature (°F 1)
- 1st hold time (HLd1)
(If there is more than 1 segment, then the ramp rate, segment
temperature, and hold time of each of the other segments will be
displayed in order.)
- delay time (dELA)
- alarm setting (ALAr)
- error codes on/off (ErCd)
- LAG setting if zone control
View Segment - only functions when a firing is in progress.
View segment is used to view the current firing segment or to skip from
the current segment to the next firing ramp. When View Segment is
pressed during a firing the current segment of the firing, the
travelling set-point and the circuit board temperature are displayed. If
it is pressed during IdLE, StOP is displayed then the current
temperature.
Skip Step (SStp) - Skip Step (Skip Step) is included in View
Segment. The skip step feature is only available in a VARY-FIRE firing
profile. It is used when enough heat work has been done at the current
segment and you want to immediately go the next ramp rate. To skip to
the next ramp, press View Segment, then within 1/2 second, press ENTER,
and ENTER a second time. If you press View Segment and do not press
ENTER within 1/2 second, the current segment (e. g., rA 1) will continue
to be displayed. Simply wait until the temperature is again displayed
and press View Segment, then ENTER within 1/2 second, and ENTER again.
If you press View Segment, then ENTER, then decide not to skip to the
next ramp stage, simply do not press any key; after about 10 seconds the
display will return to the current temperature.
4. OPTIONS SECTION
Delay - This key is used to delay the start of a firing.
Example: Program a one hour delay to the start of a firing.
Remember: the temperature must be flashing
before beginning to program.
| Step |
Press |
Display |
Comment |
| 1 |
DELAY |
Alternately flashing:
dELA and 00.00 |
The controller is ready to accept the delay time of 1 hour. |
| 2 |
1, 0, 0 |
01.00 |
Displays the selected time. Numbers to left of decimal point are
hours, to the right of decimal point are minutes. If you type a
wrong number, press zero 4 times, then type the correct number. |
| 3 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes then the current temperature |
CPL flashes several times indicating the 1 hour delay has been
accepted. The current temperature then flashes in the display. |
Alarm - This key is used to set the high or low temperature
alarm. The alarm may be set before or during a firing. When the alarm
temperature is reached, a buzzer will sound.
Example: Before the start of a firing, set the alarm
temperature to go off at 200°F.
Remember: the temperature must be flashing
before beginning to program.
| Step |
Press |
Display |
Comment |
| 1 |
ALARM |
Alternately flashing:
ALAr and # |
The word ALAr and the last entered alarm temperature will
alternately flash on the display. The controller is ready to accept
the alarm temperature. If no alarm is entered within 10 seconds, the
display will flash CPL and then the flashing current temperature. |
| 2 |
2, 0, 0 |
0200 |
Displays the selected temperature of 200°. If you type a wrong
number, press zero 4 times, then type the correct number. |
| 3 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes then the current temperature |
CPL flashes several times indicating the alarm temperature has
been accepted. The current temperature then flashes in the display. |
Other - There are nine
"Other" options. Pressing "Other" will continue to cycle through the
options available, Rset (reset), PrHt (Preheat), Id (identification),
16-S (16 segment), CnoS (Cone Offset) , CHG° (Change °F to °C), ErCd
(Error Codes), tcoS (thermocouple offset), bd t (board temperature), and
LAG (LAG setting).
NOTE: PrHt (Preheat) will not
appear in this menu unless a CONE FIRE mode has been selected. 16-S
will not appear unless User 5 is the selected program.
TO EXIT this menu without selecting any option, cycle through by
pressing "Other" until CHG° appears, then press ENTER twice.
rSEt (RESET) press "OTHER" until rSEt is
displayed, then press "ENTER". CPL will be displayed indicating that
the T/C offsets have been set to zero, the LAG to 13, and the error
codes are turned ON.
PrHt (Preheat) - Preheat is used with the CONE FIRE
mode only. When Preheat is in use, the temperature ramps up at
60°F/hour to 200°F and then holds at 200° for the amount of time
programmed. So if you start at a room temperature of 70°F, then it
will take just over 2 hours to reach 200°F at which time the hold will
start. Preheat is automatically set to zero during cone fire
programming and at the end of each firing. If a preheat stage is
desired, it must be reprogrammed for each firing.
Preheat Example: Set a preheat time of 2 hours.
Remember: the temperature must be flashing to
start the programming.
| Step |
Press |
Display |
Comment |
| 1 |
Other |
PrHt |
If PrHt does not show on the display, even after cycling through
the options, it means that a CONE FIRE mode has not been selected.
Exit the menu and select a CONE FIRE profile, then return to the
Other menu. |
| 2 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing:
HLd & 00.00 |
Preheat has been selected; enter the time you want to hold the
temperature at 200°F (in this example 2 hours) |
| 3 |
2, 0, 0 |
02.00 |
Displays the selected time of 2 hours. Numbers to left of
decimal point are hours, to the right of decimal point are minutes.
If you type a wrong number, press zero 4 times, then type the
correct number. |
| 4 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes then the current temperature |
CPL flashes several times indicating the 2 hour preheat time has
been accepted. The current temperature then flashes in the display. |
Id (identification #) - Used by KISS (Kiln
Interface Software System) to identify the kiln
when hooked to a personal computer. This is covered in a separate
KISS manual.
16-S (16 segment program) - This option allows
vary-fire programs 5 and 6 to be combined into a 16 segment program.
It only shows in the menu when user 5 is programmed and selected. When
using this option, user 5 and 6 can have 1 to 8 segments. First,
program user 5 then user 6. Next, recall user 5 and then use the
"OTHER" key to display '16-S'. Press "ENTER" to accept the option.
Press "1" until the display shows 'On'. Press "ENTER" to activate the
16 segment option. Press "START" and the controller will fire user 5
until complete and then will fire user 6.
NOTE: The first segment of user 6 must be an
up ramp or the segment will be skipped.
The cone-fire to ramp-hold feature allows for the firing of
a cone-fire program automatically followed by the User #6 ramp-hold
(vary-fire) program. Turning on the 16-segement (16-S) option after
programming the cone-fire program activates this feature.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The controller uses the first
segment of User 6 to transition from the cone fire program so the
controller ignores the first segment. This means when you program, the
number of segments you enter must be 1 greater than the actual number
of segments you need. In other words, start the actual programming
with segment number 2. The controller will ignore any information you
enter into segment 1.
Press "Enter Prog" button. Press "6" and then press "ENTER" to
program User 6 with desired program.
Segment 1 of User 6 is utilized by the controller and connot be used
for your program. Therefore the number of segments will need to be one
greater than the number used for programming. When the display showr 'ra
1' press "ENTER", "ENTER", "ENTER" to begin programming segment 2.
After User 6 is programmed, press the desired Speed button (S-BC,
F-BC, S-GL, or F-GL) in the Cone Fire options. Enter desired Cone-Fire
program. Press the "Other" button until '16-S' appears and press
"ENTER". The display will flash between '16-S' and the current
setting, either 'On' or 'OFF'. Press the "1" key until the desired
option is diplayed. Pressing "ENTER" when 'On' is displayed will allow
Cone-Fire to flow into Ramp-Hold User 6 and 'OFF' will disable this
option, meaning only the cone-fire program will fire. Press the
"ENTER" button. Programming is now complete. If 16-segment is on then
the controller will perform the Cone-Fire program and upon finishing
it will run the Ramp-Hold User 6 program.
NOTE: 16-S will appear in "REVIEW PROGRAM" if
it is turned on.
CnoS (Cone Offset) - Used to raise
or lower the final cone temperature. The final cone temperature can be
raised or lowered a maximum of 50°F (28°C).
When entering the offset temperature the following convention is
used: the left two digits designate whether to raise (00) or lower
(90) the cone temperature, that is, '00' means plus (+) and '90'
means minus (-). The right two digits are the number of degrees the
cone temperature will be raised or lowered.
Examples:
| Number |
Meaning |
| 0020 |
Raise the final cone temperature by 20°F increases heat
work |
| 0040 |
Raise the final cone temperature by 40°F "
" " |
| 0015 |
Raise the final cone temperature by 15°F "
" " |
| 9030 |
Lower the final cone temperature by 30°F decreases heat work |
| 9005 |
Lower the final cone temperature by 5°F " "
" |
| 9045 |
Lower the final cone temperature by 45°F " "
" |
The following apply to cone offsets:
- The final temperature is affected only for the cone number that
you change and no other cone numbers.
- The cone offset will remain for that specific cone number until
it is changed again.
- Typing 00 (before the desired offset temperature) will raise the
final temperature and INCREASE the amount of heat work.
- Typing 90 (before the desired offset temperature) will lower the
final temperature and DECREASE the amount of heat work.
- The maximum number of degrees that can be raised or lowered is
50°F (28°C)
- Cone offsets do not affect the VARY-FIRE mode.
Cone Offset Example: Adjust cone 07 to shut off the kiln at
20°F below Orton's prescribed cone temperature.
| Step |
Press |
Display |
Comment |
| 1 |
Other, Other |
CnoS |
If CnoS does not show on the display, press the "Other" key
until "CnoS" displays. |
| 2 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing:
ConE & # |
Cone Offset has been selected; the word ConE and the last
entered cone number will alternately flash on the display. Now enter
the cone number which you want to adjust (in this example cone 07) |
| 3 |
0, 7 |
Alternately flashing:
ConE & 07 |
The word ConE and the entered cone number (07) will alternately
flash on the display. If you type a wrong number, press zero 3
times, press ENTER, then type the correct number. |
| 4 |
ENTER |
Alternately flashing:
°F0S & 9000 |
°F OS and the previous offset setting alternately flash. Enter
the new offset temperature using the rules above, in this example,
"9020". |
| 5 |
9, 0, 2, 0 |
9020 |
The selected offset temperature is displayed. If you type a
wrong number, press zero 4 times, then type the correct number. |
| 6 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes then the current temperature |
CPL flashes several times indicating the offset temperature
adjustment has been accepted. The current temperature then flashes
in the display. |
tCoS (Thermocouple Offset) - Used
to raise or lower the temperature indicated by the thermocouples. The
maximum offset is 50°F (28°C). A positive offset is entered with 00
preceding the amount of offset and a negative offset is preceded by
90. This is the same as is done for entering cone offsets. A negative
offset will lower the indicated temperature reading and cause more
heat-work. When tCoS is displayed, press ENTER and the current
offset for the thermocouple will be displayed. Press ENTER when the
correct offset is displayed.
The following apply to T/C offsets:
- The final temperature is affected for all CONE FIRE and all
VARY-FIRE programs.
- The thermocouple offset will remain for that T/C until it is
changed again.
- Typing 00 (before the desired offset temperature) will raise the
indicated temperature but it will lower the actual temperature in
the kiln and LOWER the amount of heat work.
- Typing 90 (before the desired offset temperature) will lower the
indicated temperature but it will increase the actual temperature in
the kiln and INCREASE the amount of heat work.
- The maximum number of degrees that can be raised or lowered is
50°F (28°C).
| |
CONE Offset |
T/C Offset |
| To Correct Under-firing |
Set positive (00) cone offset |
Set negative (90) t/c offset |
| To Correct Over-firing |
Set negative (90) cone offset |
Set positive (00) t/c offset |
CHG° - Used to select degrees Fahrenheit (°F) or
degrees Celsius (°C).
Example: Change from °F to °C.
| Step |
Press |
Display |
Comment |
| 1 |
Other, Other |
CHG° |
If "CHG°" does not show on the display, press the "Other" key
until "CHG°" displays. |
| 2 |
ENTER |
°F |
Indicates that the Fahrenheit (°F) scale is being used. You can
toggle back and forth between °F and °C by pressing the "1" key. |
| 3 |
1 |
°C . |
Displays "°C .". The decimal point in the lower right corner
means that the Celsius (centigrade) scale has been selected. |
| 4 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes then the current temperature |
CPL flashes several times indicating the temperature scale has
been changed. The current temperature in °C then flashes in the
display. There will be a decimal point in the lower right-hand
corner of the display. |
ErCd - Used to turn on or turn off the error codes.
When you receive your controller the error codes are turned on. In
most cases, you want the error codes on to protect your firing. They
can be turned off if you are doing special firings, such as jewelry or
glass firing where the kiln is left open.
NOTE: When ErCd is turned OFF. When errors are off, Err6 (t/c
backwards) is still on. In cone fire mode during the last segment
(i.e., last 250 degrees) of the firing, Err1 (ramping too slow) and
Err8 (temperature falling) are turned on. Error Codes "off" also turns
the "LAG" feature off.
Example: Turn the error codes off.
| Step |
Press |
Display |
Comment |
| 1 |
Other, Other |
ErCd |
If 'ErCd' does not show on the display, press the "OTHER" key
until 'ErCd' displays. |
| 2 |
ENTER |
On |
Indicates that the error codes are turned on. You can toggle
back and forth between on and off by pressing the "1" key. |
| 3 |
1 |
OFF |
Displays 'OFF' indicating the error codes will be turned off. |
| 4 |
ENTER |
CPL flashes then the current temperature |
CPL flashes several times indicating the error codes are off.
The current temperature then flashes in the display. |
bd t (circuit board temperature) - Press "ENTER" when
'bd t' is displayed and the circuit board temperature will be
displayed. It is used for diagnostics. If 'FAIL' is displayed
indicating a failed thermocouple (t/c), press the "OTHER" key until 'bd
t' is displayed, press "ENTER". If the t/c is faulty then the
displayed temperature will be approximately room temperature. If the
circuit board has failed then 'FAIL' will continue to be displayed.
Hot Keys while the kiln is firing.
#5 Key - pressing the number 5 key will show the
calculated rate of rise. If the kiln has been on for less than 8
minutes, the display will show the programmed rate of rise and not the
actual rate.
#8 Key - pressing the number 8 key will cause three of
the display decimal points to act as pilot lights for the elements.
The thousands decimal point will light when the top element is on, the
hundreds decimal point will light when the middle elements are on, and
the tens decimal point will light when the bottom elements are on.
When you have a single zone control kiln (one thermocouple) the
decimal points will light in unison although there might be some
slight variation when each of the decimals come on.
Zone Control
Your kiln must have multiple thermocouples and be wired for multiple
zones to take advantage of these features
1. FEATURES AND ENHANCEMENTS
- 3 separately controlled zones (3 t/c inputs, 3 outputs)
- Adjustable offsets for each thermocouple (t/c)
- Continues to fire with 1 or 2 failed thermocouples (t/c's)
- Slow ramping when any zone lags the set-point
- Reset function which zeros the t/c offsets, turns the errors on,
and sets the lag to 13 degrees
2. GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The V6-CF advanced 3-zone control system is programmed the same as
the single zone control but it has new features to ensure even firing
from the top to the bottom of the kiln. A 3-zone control has 3
temperature sensor inputs (thermocouples) and 3 independent outputs so
the kiln can have 3 separately controlled sections (zones). The
controller senses the temperature in each section of the kiln, compares
the temperature to the desired temperature (traveling set-point) and
adjusts the power going to each section separately giving each just the
right amount of power to keep the temperature at the correct setting.
The single zone controller only measures the temperature at the center
of the kiln and gives all sections the same amount of power.
3. AUTOMATIC LAG FUNCTION
Lag refers to when the temperature of a kiln's section "lags" behind
the traveling set point because the programmed ramp rate is faster than
the kiln's temperature can rise. The V6-CF series 700 will slow the ramp
rate when a section of the kiln lags. The ramp rate determines the
amount of "lagging" that is allowed before the firing rate is slowed.
Fast ramp rates (>500 °F/hr) will allow the greatest temperature
difference between sections. Slow ramp rates (<70 °F/hr) will have the
smallest temperature difference between sections. Therefore, when the
controller is programmed to go fast it will sacrifice evenness to obtain
speed. Likewise, when the controller is programmed to go slow, the
controller will maintain tighter control. The controller will try to
balance speed and tight control when a medium speed is programmed.
4. THERMOCOUPLE OFFSETS (see Cone
offsets and T/C offsets in the OPTIONS
SECTION for more information)
Normal variation in thermocouples (t/c) can cause a section to fire
too hot or too cool. The zone control has an offset feature to adjust
the reading of each thermocouple to compensate for any error. For
example, if shelf cones indicate that the bottom section is under
firing, it means that the controller thinks the bottom section actually
reached the ending temperature when it really was below the ending
temperature. To correct this problem, a negative thermocouple offset is
required. This offset will be subtracted from the actual reading and
will lower the temperature reading in that section. A negative offset
will cause a section to fire to a higher temperature increasing the
heat-work for that section. A positive offset will cause a section to
fire to a lower temperature decreasing the heat-work for that section.
To return all t/c offsets to zero, press Menu, "RSET" will be displayed,
press ENTER; RSET also turns the error codes (ERCd) on.
5. THREE THERMOCOUPLES
Besides better measuring of the temperature, the zone control also
offers security through its three thermocouples. With a single zone
controller, a firing will be stopped if the thermocouple (t/c) fails.
The zone control with 3 t/c's, will continue to fire if one or two of
its thermocouples fail during a firing. If the top or bottom
thermocouple fails, that section will be controlled by the middle t/c.
If the middle thermocouple fails the middle section will be controlled
by the top t/c. If the controller is at "IdLE" and a t/c fails, the
display will alternate between FAIL and the number of the failed t/c
(1,2,3). The temperature of each zone can be viewed. The temperature
will alternately flash with the currently selected zone. To select zone
1, press the "1" key and TC 1 will alternate with the current zone 1
temperature. For zone 2 press the "2" key, for zone 3 press the "3" key.
Appendix A: Cone Fire Temperature Profiles
Firing Profile for cone 04
|
Slow Bisque Firing Profile |
Slow Glaze Firing Profile |
|
Segment |
Rate F/hr |
Temperature |
Hold |
Time |
Segment |
Rate F/hr |
Temperature |
Hold |
Time |
|
3 |
80 |
250 |
0 |
2 |
5 |
150 |
250 |
0 |
1 |
|
4 |
200 |
1000 |
0 |
4 |
6 |
400 |
1676 |
0 |
4 |
|
5 |
100 |
1100 |
0 |
1 |
7 |
120 |
1926 |
0 |
2 |
|
6 |
180 |
1676 |
0 |
3 |
|
|
|
0 |
|
|
7 |
80 |
1926 |
0 |
3 |
|
|
|
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
13 |
|
|
|
Total |
7 |
|
Fast Bisque Firing Profile |
|
Fast Glaze Firing Profile |
|
|
Segment |
Rate F/hr |
Temperature |
Hold |
|
Segment |
Rate F/hr |
Temperature |
Hold |
|
|
3 |
120 |
250 |
0 |
2 |
6 |
570 |
1676 |
0 |
3 |
|
4 |
300 |
1000 |
0 |
3 |
7 |
200 |
1926 |
0 |
1 |
|
5 |
150 |
1100 |
0 |
1 |
|
|
|
0 |
|
|
6 |
180 |
1676 |
0 |
3 |
|
|
|
0 |
|
|
7 |
108 |
1926 |
0 |
2 |
|
|
|
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
10 |
|
|
|
Total |
4 |
APPENDIX C: Common Questions and Situations
Q. During programming of
a firing, I typed a wrong number. How do I correct this?
A. Before pressing
ENTER, enter zero until all zeros are displayed, then enter the
correct number. If you have already pressed ENTER, you must press
enter to progress through to the end of the program then start the
program again.
Q. How do I clear the "PF" from the
display?
A. Press the "1" key. After several
seconds the current temperature will be displayed. Several other
numbers or STOP may be displayed before the current temperature.
Q. What does it mean when "FAIL" is
displayed?
A. Most likely the t/c
(thermocouple) is defective. See P. 18 ("bd T", board temperature) to
determine if the t/c or circuit board is at fault. If the t/c is
faulty, it may actually be poor connections on any extension wire
rather than the t/c itself. For type K thermocouples check all
connections and ensure that yellow wires are connected to yellow wires
and red to red all the way from the circuit board to the t/c in the
kiln. It is a good idea to loosen the screw connections and then
retighten them to break any oxide that may have built up. When
connecting the thermocouple, connect the RED wire to the connector
with RED dot and connect the YELLOW wire to the connector with the
"+". On type "K" thermocouples, the RED wire is always negative, and
the YELLOW wire is positive. On type "S" thermocouples the RED wire is
negative and the BLACK wire is positive.
Q. How can I find out the final
temperature that was reached during a cone firing?
A. At the end of a cone fire, the
firing time and CPLt will be flashing alternately in the display.
Press "STOP". Then press "Review Program", the final temperature will
display after oF. This final temperature will be retained until the
next firing or until the controller is reprogrammed or turned off..
Q. What is a segment?
A. A segment is the basic building
block of a program either in cone-fire or vary-fire (ramp/hold). Each
segment consists of a ramp rate in degrees per hour, a temperature you
want to achieve, and whether you want to hold there or not. For
example, a program for drying ware going at 60o/hour to 200oF and
holding for 2 hours would be a one segment firing, the ramp is 60, the
temperature is 200, and the hold is 2.00.
Q. Do I need to use witness cones for
each firing?
A. After checking your kiln with
witness cones for the first few firings, if you are satisfied with the
results you are getting and how even the kiln is from top to bottom
then you do not need to use cones in each firing. It is a good
practice to periodically place witness cones in the kiln to check for
proper firing. If you suspect a problem or your results have changed
then it is a good idea to check the operation of the kiln with witness
cones.
|