by Mooselake » 2016-Nov-Mon-14-Nov
I haven't use a 120V bed heater, but it's been done before and I've seen a few posts in other places about them. Besides what RJ said I'd add an insulator (Kapton sheet should work) between the heater and the aluminum bed just for some extra protection, and maybe put a piece of glass over it as a print surface. The SSR input essentially drives an LED, which then triggers an optical switch, so as long as you're supplying the correct type of input the bed should work. I'd test it first before connecting up the Printrboard, use a 12V DC source to trigger the SSR and see if the heater works. Be quick, since you're not controlling the input; the Printrboard will turn it off and on as needed, you're manually pretending to be that controller. Before that I'd take an ohmmeter (like the one in your handy digital meter) and make sure there's no connection between the heater and any other conductive surface, like the aluminum bed. You don't want to have a short to the bed and light up your eyeballs, not to mention all that heart stoppage fibrillation stuff, from the shock if you touch it.
Also, with that aluminum wire get some anti-oxidation grease (like Noalox, Ox-Gard, or similar. Tell your local hardware store you're doing some aluminum electrical wire and they should be able to direct you to the right product). Otherwise the connections will develop an oxide layer and start heating up. Burned down a lot of houses when they first started using aluminum house wiring. I have a 100A circuit out to my barn that uses aluminum wire and the proper oxidation guard that's been working well for nearly 40 years.
With that kind of power you should have a very fast heating bed. Just keep an eye on it - it the driver MOSFET fails on or the thermistor fails the wrong way it'll get mighty hot. This has happened with hot ends on many brands of 3D printers, and in a few cases started fires. As always you shouldn't leave your printer (of any brand) unattended while printing. The types of protection (like thermal fuses) in virtually every household appliance haven't made their way into the 3D printer world so you need to give them more attention than your coffee maker. A smoke detector and nearby fire extinguisher are a good idea.
Kirk
Modified KickStarter Classic Plus 7/2012
KS Thingybot Delta Pro 10/31/16
Creality Ender 3 Pro 12/2019