You've asked a variation of this question before, and I still don't understand the difference between having the rod out of the oven for 4 hours or having the rod in a cold oven for 1 hour and subsequently being out of the oven for 3 more hours. How is being in a cold oven any worse than being out of the oven completely? Either way, you've started your exposure timeclock running, and you have 4 hours to do as you please, unless the thing actually gets wet (someone sweats on it, or the extreme humidity that another poster described).
Once the heat of the oven is no longer applied to your electrode, it doesn't matter which side of the oven door it's on. Sitting outside at your workstation, or in the unplugged oven, what's the difference? Time in an unplugged oven is exactly the same as time in an open box placed near the welder's workstation.
So if the electrode spends an hour outside the oven and two hours in a cold oven, that's three hours of "exposure" and you still have an hour to play with before the electrode has to be baked. If instead it spends an hour outside the oven, one hour in the holding oven at holding temperature, and one hour in the cold oven, you're no worse off than you were before. You still have that hour left of the four hours since the electrode was first issued. You haven't gained anything either, though, since the hour in the holding oven wasn't long enough to reset the clock and let you start your four hours all over again.
One might think that the one hour spent in the holding oven might suspend the 4-hour exposure clock, but there's no provision for that in the code, so for the sake of code compliance and conservatism we'll let the exposure clock keep running even during short stays in the holding oven.
Here's how I see it:
8 AM: Welder takes rods from big oven, puts in little oven.
8 AM - noon: Rods live in little oven unless they're taken out one at a time and used immediately. No worries about 4-hour exposure limit except for the electrode being used at that moment, which will soon cease to be an electrode.
noon - 1 PM: Oven turned off. 4-hour exposure clock starts for all remaining electrodes.
1 PM: Welder returns. 3 hours of available exposure time remains for all electrodes.
Scenario 1, for the sake of discussion: Oven stays off.
1 - 3:55 PM: Welder welds. Exposure clock keeps ticking.
3:55 PM: Allowable exposure period almost done. Welder puts electrodes back in holding oven. Reconditioning clock starts. Electrodes will be available for use at 8 PM.
Scenario 2, closer to reality: Oven turns back on.
1 - 3:55 PM: Welder welds. Since the code does not provide for suspension of the exposure limit for short times in the oven, as opposed to a complete 4-hour reconditioning, the exposure clock keeps ticking even while the electrodes sit in the oven, counting down from 3 hours remaining at 1 PM to 5 minutes remaining at 3:55 PM.
1:15 PM: Oven reaches proper holding temperature. Reconditioning clock starts, and the 4-hour reconditioning period will be over at 5:15 PM.
3:55 PM: Everything in the rod oven is very close to its exposure limit and can no longer be used right now for welding until it goes in for reconditioning. However, since all those electrodes have been sitting in the oven at holding temperature since 1:15 PM, they can be considered to be reconditioned at 5:15 PM instead of 8 PM.
That's how I see it. Am I missing something?
If the schedule can't be arranged so that lunch ends only 3 hours before the end of the shift (at which point the rods can go in for a leisurely conditioning), you could segregate your ovens into A & B regions. "A" electrodes go into the welder's holding oven when he starts his shift and are returned to the main oven when he goes to lunch. When he comes back from lunch, he gets some "B" electrodes, and puts those back into the main oven when he's done with his shift. The "A" electrodes will be ready for use the next morning, or for the beginning of the second shift. "B" electrodes will be ready the next day, or for the second half of the second shift.
Hg
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