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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message
... On 05/05/2021 18:27, NY wrote: Anyone who has had a gas oven will be familiar with the concept of a high gas mark (temperature) giving a higher power (gas flow) than a low one. In other words, from cold, gas mark 9 followed by gas mark 4 when it's up to temp will result in the oven getting up to the final temperature of gas mark 4 quicker than gas mark 4 from the start: a gas "regulo" controls both power and on/off cycling temperature. I presume once the oven is at temp, it alternates between virtually off (just enough to keep the burner alight) and full, in a similar way to an electric oven, but when it's heating up from cold, the rate of heating is controlled by the gas mark setting. I presume that's still the case; we've always had an electric oven, but my parents have gas and I'm basing my comments on how their oven behaved. No oven I have ever encountered behaved like that Maybe my parents' oven was unusual then, and I've extrapolated to thinking this was how *all* gas ovens behaved. Sorry, if that's the case. I know that if you lit it (by putting a taper down the lighting hole at the front of the bottom of the oven), the size of the flame in the burners varied according to how far round the "regulo" knob was turned. There was no "full on or barely lit" with no gradation in between. Once it got up to temperature, *then* there was a sharp change from barely on to full on at around the temperature it was set to, but when it was cold there was a full range of flame heights, so starting it on maximum temperature *did* actually make it heat up quicker - unlike every other appliance which is simply on or off, so it would make no difference. This was an oven that dated from 1962 (it was a wedding present to my parents) and it lasted until the mid 90s when they called out a gas engineer for some trivial fault and he condemned it as unsafe, so they had to have fish and chips that night and go looking for a new cooker the following day, living on microwave meals (no oven, hob or grill) until the new one was delivered and fitted. I remember that it originally had a "gas taper" for lighting the oven: this was a thin flexible hose with a metal burner on the end, which you lit from the main pilot light (no piezo lighting!) or from a gas hob burner, and then transferred the little flame to the lighting hole in the oven. That hose got trapped so many times in the oven door as it hung down on the hinge side of the door when it was not in use, so it was removed and blanked-off when the Gas Board were converting everyone's cookers from coal gas to natural gas. |
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