- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- That’s quite complex to build 😅 - I started this summer to bake my own bread with surplus solar power in the afternoons. Works quite well with a bog standard bread baking machine that takes about 500W. - I did some napkin efficiency calculations, and while the bread baking machine recovers its costs quite quickly (< 1 year), it is not the solar electricity that makes the most difference to be honest. 
- Wouldn’t it be cheaper, more efficient, lower tech, more traditional to just focus heat with foil reflectors omitting the electricity altogether? - This is discussed in the article and tl;dr: it might be somewhat more efficient, but is very impractical. - That’s weird design and comparison; to get similar performance from a tool without electricity, you’d need some heat transfer mechanism between solar collector unit and consumer - steam? sand? just heat sufficient thermal mass and then load it with things to be cooked? I just hate the idea to waste efficiency by transferring energy through electricity here, while all heat losses could have been turned to profits instead. Electricity-centered approach of modern solarpunk pushes just a bit too far, too high tech in places where more traditional approaches could have been used. - Well, I must say that if you already have a solar electrical power system, it would be quite convenient to just hook up the oven there. Then on the other hand any conventional oven could probably do this same trick. - These are things that just came to my mind after reading this; I’m probably going to think about these more and try them next summer. This article is inspiring indeed! - There are some interesting oven designs that use rooftop solar collectors (mirrored troughs with a tube of transfer fluid running through them) connected to normal-ish form factors ovens downstairs. It’s basically the same setup for solar steam generators (if you run a business that uses a lot of steam). The only problem is it’s a direct use of the heat without much storage (from what I remember) so you can’t really start baking before sunup. - There are also some cool designs for direct solar that point a reflector dish into a hole in a wall (the inside of the hole is the inside of an oven in the kitchen). Tamara solar kitchen has one but there are lots of similar versions. 
 
 
- Maybe, I really don’t know. Do you perhaps have a relevant tutorial to share? - https://permies.com/t/65217/DIY-Solar-Oven - https://www.solarbrother.com/en/making-a-solar-oven/ - Oh come on, just grab some sunlight and go. We’ve built these babes with damaged frenel lenses from huge tvs in junkyard. 
 
 





