trust me, when it comes to me writing code, for my psychological well being I would rather buy a bunch of foil resistors then open up a IDE. MCU piss me the fuck off and they always gave me some stupid problem.
Ok, I know the basic RC, it works for vacuum, and probably sealed air to a extent but how about when there is gas flow in it (i.e. argon flow that vents)? I honestly don't know much about what happens with convection at those temperatures.
I am telling you, I am gonna miss some bracket, name a variable wrong and the thing is gonna fucking melt on me if I go with a MCU here. I think I have all the equipment in my lab to fully test a analog PID look really nice, even do emissions tests and some basic suceptability tests to RF etc. I think if I do a by-the-book job it will work if I apply all the things I know, even if its near those big power supplies. Grounding and shielding will be critical I think.
Good call on the insulation though. The control board needs a over-ride shut down if it gets over a certain temperature to shut the process down early instead of doing it poorly.
If I do use a MCU, its just gonna be a temperature read-out that hooks into a analog output of the PID. I don't think I even wanna configure it with a MCU. Maybe it will have a set-point over-ride that you can plug something into through a BNC if you want it to ramp etc, or I will leave some room in the chassis for a external controller for later control.
'
Just for a ballpark number, 2kg of copper means about 770J/K, so at 4kW that's a temp rise of 5K/s before accounting for losses and thermal resistance. '
Yea thats what I needed. I don't know why I did not think of this I did it for fluids before. The convection aspect messed with me too much for some reason. The thermal losses will also be nonlinear with temperature I think? Those bricks are gonna start conducting more at higher temperatures I think.
Q = mc∆T
2*386(Cu)*1000(K)=772000J
T=Q/P
772000/4000=~193 , close to your derivative .. ,my mind went out the window because its glowing hot