My rice cooker's "keep warm" function holds the temperature at roughly 50˚C, and I'd like to increase it to around 60˚C.
After a bit of searching, it seems like the "keep warm" function is implemented by placing a thermistor (with positive temperature coefficient) in series with the heating element.
The thermistor is a "coil" of resistive wire wrapped around mica sheets. I inserted a length of copper wire underneath a section of the coil, essentially shorting it out, decreasing the effective length (and thus the resistance) of the wire.
The cooker has been running continuously for the past hour or so, holding the temperature at about 64˚C. I did notice that the "coil" in the thermistor is glowing red hot though. Is this a bad idea? Are such wire-wound thermistors meant to glow in normal operation?