XX
THE ELECTRIC BRICK OVEN

We had no end of experiments with brick ovens. One of the most interesting was that wherein we used the brick fireplace as an oven and did the family baking in it. On a cold morning we would build up a smart wood fire in the fireplace and enjoy it during breakfast time. Then we shovelled out the coals and the ashes, and shut it up tight with a sheet iron arrangement and utilized the heat stored in the bricks for doing all sorts of cooking.

Our outdoor brick oven and our monthly baking day were such a success that they led to the construction of another oven of smaller dimensions for the kitchen. This one was heated by electric lamps—one in each of the eight corners. It had double glass doors in front so that the cooking process might be watched. The glass of the inner door would be clouded with moisture for a while, when the cooking first began, but this would soon clear up, and then the lamps enabled us to watch the colour changes in baking, etc. The lamps in the upper part of the oven were connected with a different switch from those in the lower part of the oven, so that we were able to control the browning on top or bottom at pleasure.

Harold introduced a device for automatically controlling the temperature of this oven.

Fig. 177

Strips of brass and iron, B and I ([Fig. 177]), were riveted together. These were fastened in the socket A. They are shown edgewise in the diagram. The upper end of this compound strip is free to bend back and forth in the plane of the paper, as here represented. They normally touch the screw C. One of the electric light wires runs from the lamps in the oven to this screw C. One wire of the dynamo circuit G goes to the lamps, and the other connects with A. Thus the compound strip acts as a switch to open and close the circuit upon the lamps.

This thermostat, as it is called, was placed inside of the oven. Heat causes brass to expand more than iron and therefore when the temperature reaches a certain height the thermostat curves, so as to break the contact with C, and the lamps go out. When the temperature falls a little the thermostat straightens until contact is again made with C. C is a screw and can be made to advance or recede in its socket E, so that the temperature of the oven may be maintained at any point desired. The wire of the screw C extends to the outside of the oven, where it carries an index, D, over the face of a dial, as shown in [Fig. 178].