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DIY Load Bank

TheAlfredo

Member
165
10
18
Location
Miami, FL
Anyone make a load bank using oven heating elements? Trying to figure out what I can mount them with so they stand straight up saving space.

Maybe be sacrificing a box fan for the metal frame...?
 

Bmxenbrett

Member
602
29
18
Location
NY
Cut off the top and bottom inside the oven and weld some bed angle iron to them so there facing eachother. Is that what you had in mind? What wattage are they?
 

Zed254

Well-known member
866
465
63
Location
S. Hampton Roads, VA
Buy a used electric range. I paid $50 for my 'good' one to use with my 803A and found a free one to use with my 802A. The $50 range has a warming drawer that gives me 4 electric eyes, the broiler, and the warming draw to consume ~100% power provided by the generator. The free one will only consume ~75% power available from the 803.
 

csheath

Active member
713
196
43
Location
FL
If you want to build from scratch and save space then dryer elements are the way to go. They are compact and 5400 watts each. Two of them are all you really need but if you want to push your unit you can hook another two in series.

Northern tool has a 5000 watt garage heater advertised for $90. Two of those would be as cheap as any DIY thing you could build if using all new parts.
 

robson1015

Active member
515
132
43
Location
New Concord, Ohio
Man I really need a proper shop. The garage that fills up automatically with untold '***" automatically is not cutting it anymore.
Nicer set up there robson.
Thanx NATCAD. I have a 48 x 56 shop filled to the gills.....The more room you have the more stuff you collect..
 

kawamatt2

New member
1
0
1
Location
VA
I made a loadbank from an overhead crane dynamic brake purchased second hand. The unit was wired as 4 parallel sets of 27 ohm wire wound resistors 3 per set in series. This would sink 3kW before rewiring. I rewired to have 6 parallel sets of 2 each 27 ohm resistors and can add them in stages with the switches. Each switch is basically good for about 1kW at 240V. All on they put the 802a at 100% load indicated on the meter. I ran it this way for a few hours with the box fan going and although I could tell the resistors got hot, they still seem fine.
IMG_1710.jpgIMG_1711.jpg
 
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jmpratt

New member
47
0
0
Location
Liberty Township, OH
I bought 240v water heater elements from eBay for about $10 each. Got 1.5k, 2.0k, 3.5k, and 4.5k elements. I mounted them on a board and put it on top of a barrel full of water. I have each wired to a breaker in a 12 slot breaker box. Works great.
 
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