Convection element

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@henene4/Chetlaham

I am pleased you know henene4 as I have just been through the book and cannot find that information anywhere...

@ Chetlaham I am sorry I cannot answer as cannot find it I can't even find the label with the ENR# on....
 
Range in post #22

ALL four top burners have thermostats built into the surface elements, ALL cast-iron elements like this have two elements and a thermostat that cycles one element off to keep the surface temperature around a maximum of 850F when using the element on high heat.

 

The only CI elements that do not have this built-in thermostat are ones that have an exposed thermostat that is spring loaded and contacts the bottom of the cooking vessel.

 

Thermostats are a very necessary part of any well performing and safe range.

 

John L.
 
"Thermostats are a very necessary part of any well performing and safe range."

Well, that is contradicted by the millions of Calrod units that have zero thermostatic control with the infinite switch set to high virtually eliminating any cycling.

Yes I know UL just recently required that Calrods have a T-stat, but that is from careless inviduals who IMO should not be cooking to begin with. Anytime your oil or fat smokes you are way off, and ingesting something that is toxic if you ask me.
 
These burners don't cycle on and off and they have only one element. The knobs of these burnes most of the time have 7 positions: . 1 . 2 . 3 and 0. There is no safety feature, no automatic shut off when temperatures get too high. Here is a new Smeg cooktop (or hob as it is called in British English).

https://www.vandenborre.be/elektris...ductiekookplaat/smeg-se-435-s?type=attributes

Here is a translation of a part of the product sheet:

foraloysius-2019072901123705123_1.png
 

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