Ramp-hold, Definition of a segment, Chapter 4 – Sentry Industries Sentry 2.0 User Manual

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Chapter 4

Ramp-Hold

Definition of a Segment

Ramp-Hold fires in segments. Every segment must have

a target temperature and a heating rate to reach that temper-

ature. Shown in diagram A is a segment with a temperature

of 750°.

Rate is figured in degrees per hour. In Diagram A above,

the temperature takes two hours to reach 750°. The rate is

750 ÷2 = 375.

Diagram B, below, shows three rates. A rate of 1000° will

reach 1000° in 1 hour. A rate of 500° will reach 1000° in 2

hours. A rate of 333° will reach 1000° in 3 hours.

A segment, which is a target temperature and a rate of

heating to reach that temperature, can also have a hold. Hold

maintains the target temperature for the length of time you

specify. (Diagram C, above.)

A segment has two parts:

Ramp: where the temperature changes

Hold: where the temperature remains the same

A segment can have only one ramp and only one hold.

Therefore, if you need more than one hold, you will have to

add additional segments to the firing. Firing to a tempera-

ture at a single rate would need only one segment. Reasons to

add more segments:

To change the heating rate

To add a hold somewhere below the shut-off tempera-

ture

To change the temperature direction. Example: to con-

trol the cooling rate.

Diagram D, below, shows a 3 segment firing. Two seg-

ments were used on the way up in temperature. Another

segment was added for controlled cooling.

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Diagram A: a single segment.

Diagram C: a single segment with hold. The two parts of a segment are

the ramp and the hold. Not all segments have a hold, but they all have a

ramp.

Diagram D: a 3 segment firing. Only 2 segments have a hold.

Diagram B: Rate is degrees per hour. This diagram shows 3 rates. Di-

vide the target temperature by the number of hours it took to reach that

temperature.

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