patrick_g
Elite Member
da Teacha, It was an "err on the side of safety" thing, a disclaimer like on MYTH BUSTERS, don't try this at home kids. If you blow yourself up, I'm in the clear.
A glass of super heated water is a danger in a microwave because it might turn to steam at any given moment, say just after you open the door. Even just a few oz of water turning to steam all at once is not good to be close to and if only half turns to steam the other half is sprayed out in 4 pi steradians, a scalding danger.
That little window in your oven is supposed to be transparent to microwaves. The emissions of microwave energy is right behind the window. If the oven cavity provides a poorly matched load to the output cirsuits you get a high VSWR which can result in pretty high voltages at microwave freqs. This is most likely what caused the arcing at the window. The material has been partially carbonized (black burn markis) and is not so transparent to microwaves now. When you put your "not really good to use in microwave" dishes in there with not enough food to take up the energy, you may get additional arcing and degradation of the little window. You could replace the window with a microwage transparent cover. If you operate the oven with the little window removed, then spatter, steam, and debris will likely get in where it shouldn't.
If you retire the oven while it still has a good power supply you have the makings of a good welder if yo want a fun DIY project.
Pat
A glass of super heated water is a danger in a microwave because it might turn to steam at any given moment, say just after you open the door. Even just a few oz of water turning to steam all at once is not good to be close to and if only half turns to steam the other half is sprayed out in 4 pi steradians, a scalding danger.
That little window in your oven is supposed to be transparent to microwaves. The emissions of microwave energy is right behind the window. If the oven cavity provides a poorly matched load to the output cirsuits you get a high VSWR which can result in pretty high voltages at microwave freqs. This is most likely what caused the arcing at the window. The material has been partially carbonized (black burn markis) and is not so transparent to microwaves now. When you put your "not really good to use in microwave" dishes in there with not enough food to take up the energy, you may get additional arcing and degradation of the little window. You could replace the window with a microwage transparent cover. If you operate the oven with the little window removed, then spatter, steam, and debris will likely get in where it shouldn't.
If you retire the oven while it still has a good power supply you have the makings of a good welder if yo want a fun DIY project.
Pat