Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

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  • diif
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Originally posted by beetle1303
    My previous oven element broken on regular used for 5-6 years, never had a power tripped before.

    This one is new and never had a power tripped before either when use regularly. It only tripped now after laying idle for a year or so...

    There must be something about those element insulator when left unused for long time. Maybe like come rubber shoes or PVC bags, they peeled, cracked, or disintegrated when not in used for long time?
    Just a coincidence. My friend fits 2 or 3 a week and those ovens are regularly used. The one that failed ion my oven is also used regularly.

    Leave a comment:


  • beetle1303
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Originally posted by diif
    Nothing, they also fail if regularly used.
    My previous oven element broken on regular used for 5-6 years, never had a power tripped before.

    This one is new and never had a power tripped before either when use regularly. It only tripped now after laying idle for a year or so...

    There must be something about those element insulator when left unused for long time. Maybe like come rubber shoes or PVC bags, they peeled, cracked, or disintegrated when not in used for long time?

    Leave a comment:


  • beetle1303
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Originally posted by petehall347
    try connecting one element at a time .
    Yes, in fact I only this on the lower single loop element. I reckon would be the same results on the upper double loop element also.

    Wouldn't it?

    Leave a comment:


  • diif
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Originally posted by beetle1303
    Question remains - when used regularly this heating element seems to last for years. What is causing the heating element to go bad when left unused for a long time?
    Nothing, they also fail if regularly used.

    Leave a comment:


  • petehall347
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    try connecting one element at a time .

    Leave a comment:


  • beetle1303
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    OK. I didn't re-do the bulb test, but simply heating the element to measure the resistance.
    To be safe, I put the element on the clay pot on a ceramic tile floor, wore a rubber gloves and rubber shoes. I turned on the power for few seconds at first, then left on for ~30 seconds then switched it off. The element didn't grow red but can smell the heat.
    I then measure resistance between terminal and the outer shell - it fluctuated a lot for 20-30 seconds, stabilized ~60K Ohms.

    Not sure at this level it will already trip the power, but most likely as the temperature goes up further, it eventually will.

    Based on everyone's' input, it is already clear that the element is bad. For my own academic, I am just curious to see the outcomes.

    I am guessing, based on what I have researched, that the old days oven heating element's insulating material was some kind of powdery form. When not used for a long time, it could absorbed sufficient amount of moisture around the terminals and becomes conductive. Whereas modern oven element like the ones I have, is solid plastic sealed tightly type and therefore moisture issue does not apply. And therefore many of the recommendations to fix this power trip issue also not valid..

    Question remains - when used regularly this heating element seems to last for years. What is causing the heating element to go bad when left unused for a long time?
    Attached Files
    Last edited by beetle1303; 05-04-2020, 03:14 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • beetle1303
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Originally posted by sam_sam_sam
    Another way you could do it but you must be very careful doing this is the disclaimer

    Take a 100 watt light bulb and one wire to the element the other end of wire to outer case of the element and going to do this as follows

    Line side —— one wire to the light bulb — — the other end of light bulb wire to the element terminal — — another wire goes to the outer case of the element —— and then to the neutral side of the plug

    Under no circumstances should you touch any part of the element with it plugged into the outlet you could get electrical shock or worse

    PLEASE be careful doing this test I do not want to see any one get hurt doing this test

    When doing this test you should not see the light bulb light at all if it does the element is bad

    I have done this test on devices like heater elements that I think could be internally shorted I have even done this air conditioning compressor if I do not have a insulation tester with me and all I have is a light bulb tester

    I hope this helps you
    I have done the light bulb test according to your wiring scheme - no light.

    I am guessing it would probably only light up when the element is heated up...

    Is it safe redo this test by heat up the element by adding another wire connecting the other terminal to neutral?
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • beetle1303
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Originally posted by petehall347
    real way to check is with a pats tester . i guess a megger would do a good job too . there might not be enough current from a digital multimeter to see the leak . its sounds obviously a bad one anyway . one pretty safe way to test would be remove the wires going to it and insulate them then turn it on .
    With both elements now removed from the oven and all connectors insulated, turning on power and switching to various modes, nothing happens and no power trip.

    Leave a comment:


  • sam_sam_sam
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Another way you could do it but you must be very careful doing this is the disclaimer

    Take a 100 watt light bulb and one wire to the element the other end of wire to outer case of the element and going to do this as follows

    Line side —— one wire to the light bulb — — the other end of light bulb wire to the element terminal — — another wire goes to the outer case of the element —— and then to the neutral side of the plug

    Under no circumstances should you touch any part of the element with it plugged into the outlet you could get electrical shock or worse

    PLEASE be careful doing this test I do not want to see any one get hurt doing this test

    When doing this test you should not see the light bulb light at all if it does the element is bad

    I have done this test on devices like heater elements that I think could be internally shorted I have even done this air conditioning compressor if I do not have a insulation tester with me and all I have is a light bulb tester

    I hope this helps you
    Last edited by sam_sam_sam; 05-03-2020, 04:57 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • petehall347
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    real way to check is with a pats tester . i guess a megger would do a good job too . there might not be enough current from a digital multimeter to see the leak . its sounds obviously a bad one anyway . one pretty safe way to test would be remove the wires going to it and insulate them then turn it on .

    Leave a comment:


  • sam_sam_sam
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Yes just replace the heating element

    The way to check them is with the power turn off take the wires off the element and check the resistance from the terminal to outer shell of element you should NOT have any resistance at all if you do you have a BAD element

    Leave a comment:


  • diif
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Not moisture, they are sealed, just replace it.

    Leave a comment:


  • beetle1303
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    Originally posted by diif
    That's a failed element, the insulation has broken down a little inside which shows itself when it gets hot.
    You think it's due to moisture after prolonged unused? Is any of those "heating it up to dry out the moisture" methods would work?
    Last edited by beetle1303; 05-03-2020, 10:17 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • diif
    replied
    Re: Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    That's a failed element, the insulation has broken down a little inside which shows itself when it gets hot.

    Leave a comment:


  • Electric oven tripping circuit breaker after turned on for 3-5 minutes

    My electric oven was working fine all the while from purchased 2 years ago. I have been using it weekly for about a year, but stopped using for a year now since then.
    When I turn it on again yesterday, the tripped the circuit breaker and whole house no power supply. I reset the circuit breaker, and retried. Same thing happened.

    This is what happened:
    - Turned on the oven power supply, set temperature to 200c, everything worked for a few minutes, then the power tripped. Oven was warmed/hot.
    - Reset circuit breaker, retried, same thing happened.

    I googled and found out that this is very common for electric oven - when left with not using for a long time, moisture sipped into the heating element. And when power on, it caused earth leakage and tripped the circuit breaker. This is especially common in humid tropical countries.

    Among the recommended fixes - set the temperature to min. and let it run for few minutes, then up the temperature and repeat the process till to reaches max temperature without tripping. I tried this but it tripped at min temperature within minutes.

    Another one is the disconnect the earth wire from the wall plug. Run it for an hour or so to dry out the elements. I fell this is too dangerous so did not try this.

    Last recommendation is to remove the elements. Put it into another heated oven/stove, or use hair drier to heat it up to dry out the moisture.

    I have now taken out the elements preparing to do this.

    My questions:
    1) Using DMM in continuity mode - the terminals measure around 48-52 Ohms. Terminal to metal loop measured 0L. But in resistance mode, it measure ~3M Ohms.
    Is this normal ?

    2) How to check to confirm the element is causing the power trip?

    3) To simulate the heated element leakage, can I use a laptop adapter as power source and wire a light bulb to see if it lights up?

    Thank you.
    Attached Files

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