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Forum Index : Solar : solar cooking?

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petanque don
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Joined: 02/08/2006
Location: Australia
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Posted: 02:57am 01 Apr 2011
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Has anybody had experience with solar cooking?

I am toying with getting a 1.5m parabolic dish to play with.

Initially for people living off the grid they look worth investigating.
 
petanque don
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Posted: 12:53pm 01 Apr 2011
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link to cooker

is an example of what I am considering if it helps start a comment or two.
 
Tinker

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Joined: 07/11/2007
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Posted: 01:57pm 01 Apr 2011
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  petanque don said  
link to cooker

is an example of what I am considering if it helps start a comment or two.


Well, it looks interesting but one would have a job of keeping those mirrors spotless of food splatter if the cooking is in an open pan or pot. I think the idea might have more merit for baking where the baking dish is inside an enclosure. Solar cakes anyone?
Klaus
 
KarlJ

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Posted: 09:33am 02 Apr 2011
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DIy is the go

Start with a plywood (or cardboard) box insulate it with foil backed foam
make some reflectors out of cardboard and tin foil

result -surprising!

I use a piece of fake grass as it gets really hot, a couple of pieces of foil board as a reflector and if we've forgotten to defrost food for the evening meal 20mins in the "heater" and its good to go.

An old BBQ is a good shell to start with too.
need glass lid for best results and if it gets big, which it will, best to remain on the wheels so you can re-position it every 20mins



Luck favours the well prepared
 
philb

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Joined: 05/07/2008
Location: United States
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Posted: 10:05pm 03 Apr 2011
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This is my second year to use a Sun Oven

I would have never believed they work so well. I use mine primarily as a 'crock pot'. Load it in the morning and eat in the afternoon. It takes very little work and it's too hot for the local varmints to get into.

If I had it to do over, I would make my own.
philb
 
MacGyver

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Posted: 07:37am 09 Apr 2011
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petanque don

I have lots of plates in the air right now (working on many projects), but if you can wait a while, I will be making a flat-plate solar cooker. It uses oil and has a "loop" at the top where a frying pan or kettle can be placed and used for cooking.

Because it's oil filled, it can hold much more heat than something with water, but it is also much more dangerous, so I'll have to build in some safety features before I post it on the Internet.

Be patient; it'll happen sooner or later. I'm working on a new "MacGyver Pumper" which is a windmill that pumps air using an unusual mechanical-advantage feature. It's about a third done and as soon as it's finished, I'll post the build and move on to the next project. It also furls, not that it needs it, but it'll be cool!

Unfortunately, I've got the airplane bug again, so I have to finish two planes before I get to the solar thing, but it'll happen.



. . . . . Mac
Nothing difficult is ever easy!
Perhaps better stated in the words of Morgan Freeman,
"Where there is no struggle, there is no progress!"
Copeville, Texas
 
JimBo911

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Posted: 12:34pm 09 Apr 2011
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Solar cooking is awesome.
Load it in the morning, go to work, come home and eat. Never burns or over cooks at least not around here Chicago USA.
Jim
 
petanque don
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Posted: 11:59am 22 Apr 2011
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It came on Wednesday (18 days from China) I assembled it this morning it took about 90 minutes and about 50 to 60 bolts.


It seems to work well as long as you have a shadow.

You do need dark glasses or welding goggles to use it but arc welding helmet is too dark
 
MacGyver

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Posted: 04:18pm 23 Apr 2011
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petanque don

Could you toss up a picture, please?


. . . . . Mac
Nothing difficult is ever easy!
Perhaps better stated in the words of Morgan Freeman,
"Where there is no struggle, there is no progress!"
Copeville, Texas
 
AMUN-RA

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Posted: 08:04pm 23 Apr 2011
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don what type did you get and from what company Please

Every day the sun shines
& gravity sucks= free energy.
 
petanque don
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Posted: 12:47am 24 Apr 2011
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PM sent

I will get some photos soon I should mention that the box it came in was not up to international freight as a single item it had cosmetic damage. Edited by petanque don 2011-04-25
 
AMUN-RA

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Posted: 10:19am 24 Apr 2011
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looking forward to pics and cooking results

Every day the sun shines
& gravity sucks= free energy.
 
petanque don
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Posted: 02:11am 26 Apr 2011
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cooked some soup this today started as 10 am frying the onions you really needed to watch the pot closely or you could get a brown spot on the bottom (almost burning)

easily boiled about 6l of soup if it had been on a conventional cook-top I would have turned it down.

cooker need to be re-aimed about every 20 to 25 minutes.

initial impressions are it had similar heat to a 60 mm across gas burner that is about on 3/4 it was a clear sunny day today in Adelaide (26/4/2011)

the pot holder was beginning to sag with a 30cm stock pot about 3/4 full on it.




 
petanque don
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Posted: 02:12am 26 Apr 2011
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the cosmetic damage from the freight can be seen on the panel below the cookerEdited by petanque don 2011-04-27
 
petanque don
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Posted: 02:23am 26 Apr 2011
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Another photo
 
petanque don
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Posted: 05:09am 26 Apr 2011
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checking the size of the pot it was 250 mm in diameter and 160 mm deep it had about 100 mm of liquid in the bottom.

so my calculations suggest there was about 5 liters probably around 6 Kg with the pot
 
MacGyver

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Posted: 05:14am 26 Apr 2011
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petanque don

Very Star Warsie; I like it. How much did it cost?

I've tried making reflecting cookers like this and I always spill something on the mirror and botch up it's shine. I remember the first one I made, which cooked hot dogs in less than a minute. I dropped a greasy dog on it right away and it was downhill from there.

My new cooker will be flat plate and very "passive". The plan is to double its duty as a cooker as well as a heater element for both my clothes dryer and domestic hot water. I'll post pictures of the build when it's done.



. . . . . . Mac
Nothing difficult is ever easy!
Perhaps better stated in the words of Morgan Freeman,
"Where there is no struggle, there is no progress!"
Copeville, Texas
 
petanque don
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Posted: 05:31am 26 Apr 2011
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the freight cost more than the cooker.

by todays effort I would wonder if the 1.2 m diameter one would be adequate for the middle of the day.

the link at the beginning of the tread contains a video of people using a pressure cooker in 7 degrees F I only did the conversion this is -13 Centigrade

if you are going home made would some sort of box cooker be worth considering?

Edited by petanque don 2011-04-27
 
MacGyver

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Posted: 03:48am 27 Apr 2011
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pentaque do

I made a box cooker once using a Styrofoam-insulated and polished, aluminum-lined interior all made out of a cardboard box. The lid was hinged (with duct tape) and there was a Lexan window, which let in sunlight. The cooking pot was dark colored and it would boil beans or make corn bread and nothing ever burned.

I never tried cooking any meat in it. I tried a cake and it was fine for the most part, but the center was a bit mushy. I suppose I should have left it in several hours longer.

The interior temperature stayed about 350 degrees F and that was in the summer. My latitude is approximately 34*N and that is the tilt I used to "aim" it at the sun's arc in my southern sky.



. . . . . Mac
Nothing difficult is ever easy!
Perhaps better stated in the words of Morgan Freeman,
"Where there is no struggle, there is no progress!"
Copeville, Texas
 
petanque don
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Joined: 02/08/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 212
Posted: 01:18pm 27 Apr 2011
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  MacGyver said   petanque don

Very Star Warsie; I like it. How much did it cost?




. . . . . . Mac


the link at the beginning of the thread has a group that sell them for $170 USD in the states this is about what I paid.

if you are in the states I would suggest this is about as good a deal as you would get.
 
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