The staples seem to stay put.
Of the 7 or 8 HT ovens I've built so far, the oldest one I've seen lately is about 7 years old and is used regularly by a maker of fairly high-end Carbon steel and PW kitchen knives. It had an element failure early on (16 ga Kanthal A1. I now use 14 ga A1), fixed by shortening the element slightly: the failure was very near the end, but seems to have stood up ok otherwise. He's not sprung for an Evenheat or Paragon, so it is presumably getting the job done.
On the wire diameter, the 14 ga seems about right. I buy wound elements because my supplier is set up to make them to order and they only cost the same as buying the wire to make them myself. YMMV.
I bought the original 16 ga elements wound to .380" OD to fit in a 10mm routed groove. I got the 14 ga wound to fit the same groove width. I don't think anything much thicker would wind so tightly and the groove width and depth would need to increase, cutting down the wall thickness behind the grooves. It's another thing to consider.
In theory, my new 14 ga elements will fit as direct replacements for the originals. The stretch ratio will be reduced (though still well over 2:1) and I don't want to be the one that fits them for the reasons mentioned above. My original chambers were 18"L x 7"W x 6"H and I added another brick to the length (22.5") for the ones with 14 ga elements to increase the groove length and get the stretch ratio up. The 18" ovens had performed well enough that I was confident the extra length would not be a problem. These also worked fine. For the latest 2 ovens, I went another brick for 27" long. The elements are all rated for 3 kW, 2 elements, each rated for 1500W at 115V and connected in series, as UK domestic mains sockets are rated 13A at 230V.
The 27" ovens reach 1300 degC/2372 degF with ease (they max out the type N thermocouples I use) and I'm pretty sure I could add another brick to go to 31.5" and still exceed 2150 degF. The connections to the elements were a PITA to do because they come out of the sides and need to be boxed in. The back of each oven is removable to allow them to be bolted together for swords up to 56" long (the extra 2" being a result of using 1" ceramic fiber blanket for the door- and back-gaskets. This compresses down to about 1/2" in use). In case this is not enough, the doors can also easily be extended by adding in one or two, maybe even 3, 2" thick Ceramic Fiber board spacers each, and one, maybe 2, more 2" spacers could go in the middle. 6' seems entirely possible.
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