Ok, I made the leap into PC. I have studied many videos and acquired the powder(Eastman) and some old 375 #2 lead 245 grain bullets from the nineties that I cast back then. I purchased a B and D natural convection oven, the smallest available and a temp gauge for in cabinet use.
The temperature gauges of course did not agree with each other, off by 75 degrees. At what I thought was 400 degrees turned out to be much higher than that. After about 13 minutes the bullets began to melt and ooze. I yanked them and quenched them. I did notice that the PC began to melt rapidly when I put the bullets in the oven. The parchment paper went brown. After quenching I did a smash test and found no flaking. The bullets were coated well, that was not a concern. The shake and bake method worked perfectly even in a smallish number 5 container. I did manage to actually size the least deformed bullets that had no real upset and they sized to .379 easily from .381 as cast. I used my Lyman number 45 lubrisizer without pressure from the lube reservoir.
My observations lead me to conclude that a small oven will produce more concentrated heat and therefore can be run cooler than the dial indicates and for a shorter time. I can adapt and will experiment when my dies arrive next month. I think Elvis is on to something regarding time and temp. Oven cabinet size I believe needs to be accounted for. Below are some pics.