Induction Electric Cooking

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toggleswitch

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Induction Electric Cooking- all the benfits of electric:
Fater, cleaner, safer,cooler

..and most of the benfits of gas:
Instant respose, Instant on and off (but still not visual.)

Said to be more efficient too.

(P.S.) (some?)IKEA inexpensive SS pots are magnetic and would work.

 
Couldnt find it on the website?

Induction must be making a come back. I think it was GE who introduced their Magnawave range to great fanfare back in the late 70's and write ups gushed about this new type of cooking plus the most important testimonial of all.. Cher had one LOL.
I remember seeing them demo'd at the Home Show, water a boiling whilst a Kraft Caramel sat unperturbed only inches away from the "burner". I guess most people though impressed weren't that willing to fork over the high purchase cost because it never really took off. After all inflation was rampant then. I can't remember if the Magnawave preceded GE's Versatronic with the microwave feature built into the regular oven.
Countertop induction hotplates are readily available in most Chinatown or Asian appliance stores from makers like Hitachi and Sanyo and aren't too expensive, handy little gadgets if you cook a lot or take to a cottage.
 
I have an induction cooktop and can't wait to remodel my kitchen to accomodate it. Jon (jetcone) has one in his kitchen and it's awesome! He had a GE 30" version a year ago and is now using a Kenmore model. Mine is a GE 36", found at the Habitat for Humanity Store and worked perfectly.

I love this method of cooking - completely clean, cooler, safer and more responsive than radiant. If you're frying something messy, you can lay a sheet of newspaper over the cooktop, fry away and when finished - roll up the newspaper and toss it out. Stainless/magnetic pans are required, my All-Clad is perfect but I'll still have to have one coil unit to use my Whirleypop!
 
Very interesting! Can anyone explain exactly how this works? Also does it produce a large electromagnetic field around the unit while it's on? (This could be a risk of frying computer memory devices nearby.)
 
At one time there was concern that the induction cooker could generate a feild strong enough to disrupt a pecemaker-pacemakers are better sheilded now.Would be a worry though.There is a warning sign posted at the tx site I work at regarding pacemakers-that the RF here could disrupt them.The induction cooker works by a coil(the "burner")A RF energy is fed into the burner coil-that "induces" a current flow into a steel pan or one containg iron or steel.-and causing the pot to heat to cook your food placed into the pan.The induction stove works on the same principle as induction heater and furnaces used in industry to melt iron,steel,metal alloys,refining metal alloys(the induction generater can "induce" its energy into a "work coil" placed in the vacuum chamber -the coil is around the crucible of the material to be melted)Semiconducter manufacturing uses induction heaters to melt silicon and germanuim for semiconducter making.Another household example of an induction heater is the newest Braun electric razor cleaner used with their newer shaver-instead of a fan blowing across the razor head after the cleaner is pumpted thru it- a minature induction coil induces RF energy into the shaver head to heat it and cause it to be dried.The in duction cookers and heaters work on the "transformer principle" the pan or pot is a secondary winding -in the case of industrial heaters-the work coil induces energy into a crucible or metal to be heated or melted.Its a fascinating process-industrial heaters can generate megawatts of power.Also these are used to heat crucibles used in synthetic gemstone manufaturing-ex Cubic Ziconia and synthetic rubies and Beryl "cats-eye" stones.
 
Safety

IMHO-

Microwave ovens were well feared/revered when they came out. I'm still not sold on their safey. However the benefits they provide seem to outway the perceived/actual risk. They are used for 4 minutes at a time. Everyone has one. Literally even my grandmother! Basically now they say just don't stare into one... so where do we now mount them? Over the stove at eye-level. Go figure.

Just as with cell phones (called "Mobile" elsewhere) there is a 3 watt max. limit because they are KNOWN to fry the brain.
A woman has her purse. But for a man, pants (trouser) pockets fry your .. uh the next generation... the jacket pocket is near one's heart and the belt hook probably fries the kidneys. Still, everyone has one....

Now I'm guessing here, But I think Europe has lotsa induction cooking, and the healty risks of RF and EMF (electo-magnetic fields) is accepted as real there. Here there is COMPLETE denial that there is such an issue but we still don't use induction. I'm so confused. LOL

Listen, if you live in a brick house there is no (solar and environmental, natural) radiation for years, then it is given off faster when "full" Live in a glass house and get it all along the way.

Most of the world would NEVER eat or allow the additives and artifical colors in food the US does. Not to mention prservatives and pesticides.

So I REFUSE to worry about induction cooking. In my own littel simple world the pan absorbs it all and turns it into heat. The automatic shut off when no pan is present is enough of a safety feature to me!
 
I don't worry about the EMF RF feilds either-In my work as a radioman I am exposed to RF feilds almost daily.Even climed on "hot" AM broadcast towers to fix the tower light box on the tower.Had the AM medium RF going thru me and was radiating just like the tower!You just put the wood ladder at the tower base and climpb on-Now this is not allowed by OSHA.When I was done on that tower-just jumpted off when I got to the base.Even "played with" the RF at small stations-one 250W station was fun to play with the RF.Like I would hold a flourescent bulb in one hand and touch the station tower with the other-and light the bulb-same as with OA2 gas regulator tubes-they lit nicely!I don't have fears of the induction cooker-just mentioning some folks were concerned-I did have GREAT respect for RF feilds from FM and VHF and UHF TV-those can fry you internally just like a microwave-same with high powered satellite uplink transmitters-in fact these have a warning light on the top of the dish warning people it is energised and radiating.I also used the RF feild from an FM isocoupler to "light" a flourescent bulb so I could work on a base mounted tower lighting box-a "cordless" trouble light!You could feel your hand "heat up" if you put it in that feild.Also was interesting to slide a flourescent bulb along the transmission line to observe the high RF voltage points from the standing wave ratio-the antenna at the time had high VSWR.Fried a couple of transmitter tubes.-and caused the isocoupler to arc over-tripping the transmitter off-would have to reset it.
 
Needless to say, most of us around here should never try messing with high-powered RF systems; we don't have Tolivac's training & experience to do it safely.

Okay, so induction cooking sounds like a good idea, with heat being generated in the material of the cooking vessel itself (rather than on the burner). From what I read on the website (thanks, Toggleswitch) seems to me that the energy savings vs. conventional electric cooking comes in terms of rapid heating of the vessel, and lack of "waste heat" after the element is turned off. That is, you don't get the lag times of conventional electric elements, so the energy waste due to those lags is eliminated. And, as a direct result, you get the responsiveness of a gas cooker in terms of adjusting the heat level quickly.

Here in California, much of our electricity supply is dependent on natural gas, so any electric cooking is in effect gas cooking one step removed. Over time that is going to change as the natural gas supply peaks along with oil. Those problems will (hopefully) be solved by building more nuclear and wind power.

I didn't have time to check the manufacturer links, so I'm still wondering: what is the cost of a 2-element module, or even a 1-element free-standing unit?
 
Despite "playing with" the low powered RF-the high powered stuff can fry you.I do have a RF burn scar from a time I did get careless.Getting burned by Medium wave AM is worse than being burned by fire.The RF cauterizes the nerves in the wound-you don't feel it when you get burned.After a few days or so when the nerve grow back-it then hurts a lot.The RF switcher I got my hand too close to was in a 10Kw AM station.You had to manually clip the dummy to the Tx you wanted to test.After that a RF swiching contactor was installed right away so no one else would get burnt.I am not "magnetic"-yet. Just wonder if I will die from some strange disease.I also carry a cell phone as well.I did that work under old rules-under new saftey regs the towers have to be denergised and grounded.Even a denergised ungrounded tower or antenna is VERY dangerous.The voltages they can collect can be lethal.I would not get on any towers that were in 50Kw AM arrays.These are lethal.Thats why those tower feilds are fenced and warning signs posted on them.Thats been an FCC and OSHA rules for years.I don't climb towers anymore-the box was about 8ft and another was about 20ft up.You can spot AM towers in the fenced feilds-the tower rests on a ceramic "base insulator" and the guy cables have insulators in them(if they are steel rope)So the guys won't pick up the energy from the tower and "reradiate" it spoiling the systems pattern.also the AM tower guys are now made of a plastic rope material called "Phyllistran"I don't know what the plastic in it is-but can be as strong or stronger than steel rope-and just as sunlight resistent.The FM (or rarely TV) antenna isocoupler is an RF isolation transforemr allowing the FM transmitter to safely feed an FM antenna mounted on an AM tower.since the tower is "hot" with the AM RF from the AM transmitter-the isocopler keeps the AM out of the FM xmiiter and vice-versa.The FM antennas are side mounted and have many individual antennas on them known as "bays" to get the apprioate antenna gain and pattern.TV asntenna are top mounted on towers-mostly the tower is just for the TV antenna-looks like a "stick" mounted on the top-Low band(Ch2-5)) have large elements called "batwings" that are the antenna elements.Me and my friends have become antenna and tower spotters-neat to try to indentify them.
 
HoHo-Tolivac-love reading about this stuff.

I also haven't seen these induction ranges for a while; thought to myself they would be the way to go. Can you or anyone else also tell me what happened to the electric ranges with the European style "hob" rather than the coil? I have only seen a few of these around and apparently they are not being sold anymore. I liked the way these looked.
 
HOBS

WP & KA & Magic Chef had them here... for about 5 minutes

If your think an ordinary (in US) coil is not quick & responsive.. .you should see these cast-iron "Hobs" function.
(They were the euro-std for decades, I believe.)

I was told they have some massive heat-retention and that you would select your "final" deired heat setting at first and dare not move it. [Isn't most cooking done on "HI" (till something boils or sizzles) then "medium", then up or down from there? --but I digress.] I can see how hobs got annoying.

I have heard that you need to toss a wet towel over the hob to cool it quicky (I probably would not try this!!)

This may explain why smooth-tops (called vitro-ceram, elsewhere) caught on across the pond quite fast and is pretty std. in europe already.

I think sales of smooth-tops has finally out-paced cois in this county as of lately, as the price has fallen. If I may be so bold ..I think this is possible because (at least some) of US manufacturers us SCHOTT-Ceran (German) "Glass"
 

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