How long does it take a microwave oven to warm up?

On 12/01/2016 09:15 AM, amdx wrote:
On 11/30/2016 4:23 PM, micky wrote:
An eggroll of a given size is 2 minutes 40 seconds,
even though wrapper says 4 minutes.)

Pan fry your egg rolls, roll so four sides get crispy.
Microwaved egg rolls just aren't worth eating. IMHO
Mikek

Mostly I use the microwave for heating already-cooked food.

One exception is bacon.

--
24 days until the winter celebration (Sunday December 25, 2016 12:00:00
AM for 1 day).

Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.us/

"If fascism ever comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and
carrying a cross." -- Upton Sinclair, Huey P. Long, and others.
 
On 12/1/2016 11:35 AM, Mark Lloyd wrote:
On 11/30/2016 04:23 PM, micky wrote:

[snip]

**This actually raises another question. I'm pretty darn good at
predicting how much time I need to microwave something, and once in a
while I can even remember from experience. (Cocoa from refrigerated
milk is 2 minutes. An eggroll of a given size is 2 minutes 40 seconds,
even though wrapper says 4 minutes.)

I have an older microwave, that has only 700W. Most directions are for
higher power. I find most things are OK if I add 25% to the cooking
time. For example, if it says 3 minutes I use 3:45.

BTW, some people have said that if I got a new microwave, it would
probably fail before the old one.

Maybe, we have one that was manufactured in 1983, still works fine,
but we have two, and this one is not used as much.

Mikek
 
In sci.electronics.repair, on Wed, 30 Nov 2016 23:20:17 -0500, Mike
Duffy <mqduffy001@bell.net> wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2016 17:16:05 -0600, Jon Elson wrote:

The heater in the magnetron tube takes a couple seconds to warm to the point
where it will emit electrons. You can hear it easily on the old transformer
microwaves, the fan starts and it begins to hum, then a couple seconds later
the hum gets much louder. That louder hum is when the magnetron tube starts
conducting.

Newer microwaves with switching power supplies may delay turning on the HV
until the heater has warmed up, and they may not have that transformer hum,
so it may be harder to tell when the RF comes on.

+1, You are the only one who did not lambast the OP for using the term
'warm up' to mean 'cause the ambient MW intensity to reach its operational
range'.

Just for the record, I consciously used the phrase, because it reminds
me of simpler times, harmed only by the extra time it took to turn on
the radio or tv. (In the movies, sometimes they would turn something
on and it woudl start immediately. I did stay at a hotel once 8 years
ago that was also operating in the 30's and it still had the remote
speaker/channel selector for the central radio it used then. Each room
had one and the patron could swtich between two or three stations, and
adjust the volume, so when you turned it on, it went on immediately.
Unfortunately, the hotel finally closed.)
When I am judging time for extremely small loads (like softening butter
without liquifying it), I allow 4 seconds for my oven.

I'm pretty sure mine is less tnan 4 seconds becuase I really have used
7 seconds and found noticeable heating, more than I think 3 seconds
would have done, based on the prior 10 seconds.

BTW, if you get one of those slabs of chocolate chip cookies, precut,
they say to cook them in a hot oven of course, but 37 seconds per square
does a good job. Not like baked, but like a differen4 recipe.

Another reason to know the startup time is if I make two of them, it
only has to start-up once, so it needs less than twice the time, but the
instructions already say less than twice the time, and their
differential is greater than 4 seconds. I think there is some reason
for that other than start-up, warm-up time.

I find that the hum does not get louder though. Instead, I notice that the
fan speed lowers a bit, presumably because the supply voltage for the fan
is then being loaded down by the power consumption by the magnetron.
 
FromTheRafters posted for all of us...


The ovens power output is also
an important factor to consider.

Get a Binford 6150 MMMMM More power.

--
Tekkie
 
On 11/30/2016 03:16 PM, Jon Elson wrote:
micky wrote:

How long does it take a microwave oven to warm up?

The heater in the magnetron tube takes a couple seconds to warm to the point
where it will emit electrons. You can hear it easily on the old transformer
microwaves, the fan starts and it begins to hum, then a couple seconds later
the hum gets much louder. That louder hum is when the magnetron tube starts
conducting.

Newer microwaves with switching power supplies may delay turning on the HV
until the heater has warmed up, and they may not have that transformer hum,
so it may be harder to tell when the RF comes on.

Jon
Heh, you could put a flashbulb in there, no missing that indicator...one
of the "urban legends" of the day, when I was working on military radar
systems was that you could take out all the flashbulbs in the base
exchange store if you forgot to blank the output as it rotated by that
direction...no idea if it's true or not, but 5MW could fry most anything
if you wanted to bad enough.
 
On Wednesday, November 30, 2016 at 6:57:50 PM UTC-5, tom wrote:
"Jon Elson" <jmelson@wustl.edu> wrote in message
news:0sidnaf7d81CwaLFnZ2dnUU7-UednZ2d@giganews.com...
micky wrote:

How long does it take a microwave oven to warm up?

The heater in the magnetron tube takes a couple seconds to warm to the
point
where it will emit electrons. You can hear it easily on the old
transformer
microwaves, the fan starts and it begins to hum, then a couple seconds
later
the hum gets much louder. That louder hum is when the magnetron tube
starts
conducting.

Newer microwaves with switching power supplies may delay turning on the HV
until the heater has warmed up, and they may not have that transformer
hum,
so it may be harder to tell when the RF comes on.

Jon

Stick an old CD in the MW and you can see exactly when the RF power starts.

I tried that with one of my wife's Kenny G CDs. A few seconds in the MW improved it immensely.
 
In sci.electronics.repair, on Fri, 2 Dec 2016 20:25:14 -0800, Bill
Martin <wwm@wwmartin.net> wrote:

On 11/30/2016 03:16 PM, Jon Elson wrote:
micky wrote:

How long does it take a microwave oven to warm up?

The heater in the magnetron tube takes a couple seconds to warm to the point
where it will emit electrons. You can hear it easily on the old transformer
microwaves, the fan starts and it begins to hum, then a couple seconds later
the hum gets much louder. That louder hum is when the magnetron tube starts
conducting.

Newer microwaves with switching power supplies may delay turning on the HV
until the heater has warmed up, and they may not have that transformer hum,
so it may be harder to tell when the RF comes on.

Jon

Heh, you could put a flashbulb in there, no missing that indicator...one
of the "urban legends" of the day, when I was working on military radar
systems was that you could take out all the flashbulbs in the base
exchange store if you forgot to blank the output as it rotated by that
direction...no idea if it's true or not, but 5MW could fry most anything
if you wanted to bad enough.

30 years ago I saved a couple flashbulbs for the expected shortage, but
I don't know where they are now.
 
In sci.electronics.repair, on Thu, 1 Dec 2016 09:15:49 -0600, amdx
<nojunk@knology.net> wrote:

On 11/30/2016 4:23 PM, micky wrote:
An eggroll of a given size is 2 minutes 40 seconds,
even though wrapper says 4 minutes.)

Pan fry your egg rolls, roll so four sides get crispy.

I may take your suggestion if I can find the pan.

If I can find the oil.

Microwaved egg rolls just aren't worth eating. IMHO
Mikek

It's a different taste sensation. Next I should try them with
chocolate syrup!
 
In sci.electronics.repair, on Wed, 30 Nov 2016 23:25:52 -0800, Jeff
Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2016 18:57:51 -0500, "tom" <tmiller11147@verizon.net
wrote:

Stick an old CD in the MW and you can see exactly when the RF power starts.

Good idea. Another way would be to cram a wad of paper between the
door and the oven, and use a microwave leakage detector to measure the

You can really do that? I did do that with Amana model 2, that had no
door latches, only springs. To check if the microwave detector was
working, and it was. And to check if the oven was leaking and it
wasn't.

BTW, Radio Shack stopped selling its cheap detector years ago. I
suppose it was sold by someone else but I haven't seen it.

resultant leakage. It there's a slow rise in output, you'll see it on
the meter, which you won't see on the CD.
 
In sci.electronics.repair, on Sat, 3 Dec 2016 03:08:33 -0800 (PST),
ohger1s@gmail.com wrote:

On Wednesday, November 30, 2016 at 6:57:50 PM UTC-5, tom wrote:
"Jon Elson" <jmelson@wustl.edu> wrote in message
news:0sidnaf7d81CwaLFnZ2dnUU7-UednZ2d@giganews.com...
micky wrote:

How long does it take a microwave oven to warm up?

The heater in the magnetron tube takes a couple seconds to warm to the
point
where it will emit electrons. You can hear it easily on the old
transformer
microwaves, the fan starts and it begins to hum, then a couple seconds
later
the hum gets much louder. That louder hum is when the magnetron tube
starts
conducting.

Newer microwaves with switching power supplies may delay turning on the HV
until the heater has warmed up, and they may not have that transformer
hum,
so it may be harder to tell when the RF comes on.

Jon

Stick an old CD in the MW and you can see exactly when the RF power starts.


I tried that with one of my wife's Kenny G CDs. A few seconds in the MW improved it immensely.
I have a 45 rpm record someone must have left in the sun. Seen from the
side, it's one long sine wave, going around in a circle, and the
amplitude is an inch and half.

I'm trying to find a record player with a 2-inch needle so I can play
it.
 
In sci.electronics.repair, on Fri, 2 Dec 2016 16:22:34 -0500, TekkieŽ
<Tekkie@comcast.net> wrote:

FromTheRafters posted for all of us...


The ovens power output is also
an important factor to consider.



Get a Binford 6150 MMMMM More power.

All my power tools are Binford.
 
On Sat, 03 Dec 2016 16:11:12 -0500, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com>
wrote:

In sci.electronics.repair, on Wed, 30 Nov 2016 23:25:52 -0800, Jeff
Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2016 18:57:51 -0500, "tom" <tmiller11147@verizon.net
wrote:

Stick an old CD in the MW and you can see exactly when the RF power starts.

Good idea. Another way would be to cram a wad of paper between the
door and the oven, and use a microwave leakage detector to measure the
resultant leakage. It there's a slow rise in output, you'll see it on
the meter, which you won't see on the CD.

You can really do that? I did do that with Amana model 2, that had no
door latches, only springs. To check if the microwave detector was
working, and it was. And to check if the oven was leaking and it
wasn't.

Yep, although the choke joint does a good job of blocking RF even with
a gap. I just crammed a few layers of paper into the door of my
Panasonic Sensor 1300U microwave oven. For a leakage detector, I used
an MD-2000 detector.
<https://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&q=md-2000+microwave>
and a Micronta (Radio Shock) 22-2001:
<http://www.radiomuseum.org/r/radio_shac_micronta_microwave_leaka.html>
With about 1/32" wad of paper, and with me shoving my weight against
the door hold it closed, I got about a 5mw/cm^2 indication. There was
also a cup of water inside the oven.

The first time I ran it, it too about 5 seconds for the power to level
off. Repeated tests took less, down to about 2 seconds. Note that
the Panasonic oven uses "inverter technology" which might have
different characteristics than a conventional microwave oven:
<http://www.sears.com/articles/appliances/microwaves/what-is-inverter-technology.html>

The Micronta 22-2001 meter isn't calibrated, but I assume that
mid-scale is 5mw/cm^2, which is considered the danger level. I had to
play with the orientation for maximum indication, but it read about
2/3 of way up the green part of the scale, and did not go into the
red. Timing was about the same as the MD-2000 at about 3-5 seconds to
reach full power.

The first time I did the wad of paper in the door test was many years
ago on a different microwave oven. The reading was much higher and
the door had a machanical latch. How much higher, I don't recall.

There are plenty of more modern leakage detectors available.
<https://www.google.com/search?q=microwave+oven+leakage+meter&tbm=isch>

I suspect I could get some RF to leak out of the oven by taking a
length of coaxial cable, strip off 1/4 wavelength (31.3mm) from both
ends, stuff one end in the oven, and measure whatever is re-radiated
from the other end.

BTW, Radio Shack stopped selling its cheap detector years ago. I
suppose it was sold by someone else but I haven't seen it.

No loss.

--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
 

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