| Main knowledge bank page |
Recent additions |
Recent changes |
What links here |
Categories |
Category cloud How-to guides | Organisation profiles | Project profiles | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Parabolic Solar Reflector and Heat Storage Cooker
[top] [end]Effective solar cookingGaining and retaining the sun's power for cooking - these are the two principles that can generally be employed by solar cookers.While box-type solar cookers try to use both principles at the same time, the use of one or more haybox cookers together with a powerful parabolic type cooker makes a brilliant combination. [top] [end]The SK 12 parabolic solar reflectorThis is a high-capacity solar cooker. The size and design of its cooking pots are especially adapted for haybox cooking. Once in the haybox the food is cooked further by the retained heat. It can be left unattended and keeps warm for later consumption while the cooker can immediately be used for other cooking or sterilizing water.[top] [end]ManufactureManufacture of the SK 12 is possible by local craft workers using simple cutting, bending and punching tools and utilizing easily available materials throughout, such as strip steel, wire and ordinary nuts and bolts.With its 1.4 metre diameter mirror the SK 12 is a powerful solar collector, capable of bringing three litres of water to the boil within half an hour, as well as allowing frying. So it is a high-heat cooker, and together with cooking pots of 28 cm in diameter, ie pots of up to 10 litres, it is also a high-capacity cooker which can meet the cooking needs of up to 20 people. [top] [end]Traditional cooking'Sitting by the fireside, waiting for the meal to be ready after a hard day's work...' Everybody knows that the family's traditional fireside has more significance than just cooking. Unfortunately only a few are aware of the fact that fuel-saving solar cooking can blend perfectly with fireside traditions if only a simple and comfortable system of ancient origin is used.[top] [end]Back to our rootsDaily cooking frequently includes a long simmering period which is required for many beans, grains, stews and soups. The amount of fuel needed to complete these cooking processes can be greatly reduced by cooking with retained heat in a heat storage cooker such as a hay box.[top] [end]The hayboxThe haybox is simply a well insulated box or basket lined with a reflective material into which a pot of food previously brought to the boil is placed. The insulation greatly slows the loss of conductive heat, convective heat in the surrounding air is trapped inside the box, and the shiny lining reflects the radiant heat back into the pot.The food is cooked in one to two hours by the heat retained in the insulated box. This works best when the pot fits snugly into the insulation with no air in between. [top] [end]Be inventiveSuch a box or a basket can easily be made of inexpensive, locally available materials. It can be wooden, or a can-in-a-can, or card board, or any combination. Hay, straw, rushes, feathers, sawdust, rags, wool, shredded paper, etc are all good insulating materials.Comparison of some normal and parabolic/haybox cooking times
Principles to be kept in mind are:
After the food is cooked it keeps hot for many hours. [top] [end]Haybox cooking is differentThere are some adjustments involved in cooking with haybox cookers:
[top] [end]Contents: Boiling Point 36: Solar Energy in the Home
Categories: Boiling Point 36| Solar Cookers | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Page created:
16 August 2007; Last edited:
16 August 2007; Version: 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pagename: ParabolicSolarReflectorAndHeatStorageCooker @HEDON: UQGA | |||||||||||||||||||||||||

