That is interesting that you mentioned the power interrupt. This PID has 3 options you can program in the event the power interrupts.
1. Resume at whatever point you left off
2. Restart at step 1.
3. Simply stay off
The power is rarely off where we are cooking so we chose the default (option 1). We chose this because probably 3 out of 4 times there is a power interrupt, it just blinks or is off only a few minutes. Resuming where you left off in these cases is OK, and having to start over every time this happened would be cumbersome. But if the power was off 12 hours or more, the temp would drift down low enough that jumping right back to max temp might happen too fast for the rock. I think if we are cooking at a time when we think the power might be interrupted (like during a thunderstorm), we would just have to manually shut it off if we lost power for an extended time. The best setup would probably be to have one of the larger Uninterruptible Power Supplies (UPS) like you have on a computer (file server) and program the PID to simply shut off if you loose power. This way any blip in power or outage that lasts less than an hour or two would be covered by the UPS and the PID would run as normal. If the power was out long enough to drain the UPS, the PID would simply shut off and stay off.
Regarding cost, the ramp/soak PID, SSR, Heat-Sink, and Thermocouple were something like $110-$120. I bought a $30 project box that I would not buy again. We gave $50 for our broken kiln and the total we have in this thing (including the kiln, the things mentioned above, and a switch, indicator lamp, wires, relay, connectors, etc.) was $239 total. If you didn't need the ramp/soak feature you could deduct about $40 from the PID.
The most impressive part of this whole deal (in my opinion) is that we are doing this with only 920 watts of heat in that kiln, and it doesn't have to fire the element that often (guessing 20 percent). I think using the two center existing coils (wired serially) was great for initial cost and efficiency. The coils we are using make 6 complete wraps around the center part of the kiln.
It has been a crazy week because my daughter's wedding is today. Maybe next week I can take time to document this a little better for others who want to try this.