Electronics Forum | Fri Jan 21 15:33:43 EST 2005 | Mark
>Hours mean nothing on these machines. Correct me if I am wrong but isn't it true that heaters and blowers (maybe valves) have a specific lifespan? I would think that parts in an oven with many hours on it are due to fail sooner than those in one wit
Electronics Forum | Sat Feb 05 15:07:50 EST 2005 | etienne
??? Your reply was of no interest to anyone.....If the person above wanted to share his name and surname, he would probabbly have written them down, so please let us keep everybody's privacy, and thank people like Marc C who give us answers when we a
Electronics Forum | Tue Jan 25 09:01:02 EST 2005 | Marc C
Hi All I work for the supplier mentioned above and just want to pass along some info. OmniFlo ovens use to have timers. They were located at in the electrical box and not in the software but a "mechanical" timer. These were removed from the ove
Electronics Forum | Fri Jan 21 19:10:49 EST 2005 | fastek
Allow me to re-state my response. Hours on an oven would be the last thing I would care about if I wanted to know something about it. There is no standard lifespan on heaters, blowers and the like. They can last a year or ten. Sure you can assume a 5
Electronics Forum | Thu Jan 20 22:26:50 EST 2005 | fastek
I have people ask me on occasion how many hours an oven has run and for the life of me can't figure out why they would want to know that. Who cares? They work until they don't...not much middle ground...unlike a chipshooter which will reach a point t
Electronics Forum | Fri Jan 21 13:39:15 EST 2005 | Chunks
Directors and company owners care since they're buying it. It's like an odometer on a car - just an indicator. But like your chipshooter example, moving parts on an oven wear out too. They just don't stop working. Plus they're subjected to higher
Electronics Forum | Mon Jan 24 18:41:43 EST 2005 | Chunks
Sorry Pete (and others), they do have em'. Back side of the oven. Open the doors with the power supply switch and it's right next to the power relay. Little digital ones on the Omni Flo series. Nope, our company is selling the ovens and several i
Electronics Forum | Fri Feb 15 15:55:58 EST 2008 | pjc
This is from the OmniFlo 5 Engineering data sheet: EXHAUST SPECIFICATIONS: STANDARD AIR OPERATION: - Load-end: 150 cfm (255 m3/hr) at the 4� (102 mm) stack (minimum requirement) - Unload-end: 300 cfm (510 m3/hr) at the 4� (102 mm) stack (minimum req