same princable as a solar wax melter. however with large amount of honey you wouldn't have enough constant sunlight to fully heat it before it cools off overnight.
I don't think a few bulbs running for a few days will really hurt the power bills much, maybe at worst $20 or $30 would be my guess with several bulbs running for at least a week.
I do like that kiddy pool of hot water though - but that too comes with bills, the gas bills to heat the water. I'm not sure if there's really a painless way to deal with this.
With a cover to insulate the metal plate side at night, it should hold enough heat in overnight, especially if this is done in summer.
I think I'll do a detailed design of one, and test it on a couple of buckets of honey that are crystallized.
Wayne,
I'm not sure you even have to go to that extent (at least in the summer). I've discovered here in So. Cal, all I have to do is put a 2/2 foot piece of plywood down in the middle of my nice back asphalt driveway, place the 5 gallons of honey on top and tomorrow when I'm ready to use it, it is all nicely liquefied. The plywood is important, otherwise it melts the bottom of the bucket.
Cheers
Jay
I am still waiting to here from another commercial meadery here. ian
I'm not sure you even have to go to that extent (at least in the summer).
...and let's not forget mfalenski and Smarrikåka, who both have fledgling commercial operations starting up and are similarly trying to work within somewhat constrained budgets.Actually you have heard from at least one - I know Noe runs a commercial meadery
I am still waiting to here from another commercial meadery here.
ian
I would love to hear from Brad at B.Nektar, and I would love to hear from anyone with this problem. Most (even commercial sized meaderies) do not need to heat this large amount of honey, as they have quite a few smaller batches going, which only require the heating of one to ten pails at a time. I am sure Brad is at this size, so hoping he chimes in.
I like it. Nothin' fancy - parts all readily available and relatively cheap. My kind of engineering! ;DMy next ninja move is to build a honey warming closet. Shipping honey in totes would be WAY cheaper per pound since we'd be able to fit about 330 gallons on a pallet instead of only 220 (55gal drum x 4). The problem would be that I can't wrap a heat band around a tote. SO, I'm going to build an insulated cube with the floor missing. The cube will have 4 x 48" electric baseboard heaters attached to the inside walls at the bottom. A thermostat will control the heaters. Small 4" computer case fans will be placed very strategically within the box to circulate the air. The entire box will be attached to a rope on a pulley so it can be raised and lowered in our warehouse. We'll place the 330 gallon tote in the spot below the box, then lower the box over it. Shazaam!! Liquid honey.
Oh, Hey! How's it going? I've been lurking.
The solar idea is pretty cool. But leaving that much honey outside near Detroit is just asking someone to steal it. (just kidding)...
The Underpants Gnomes
Step 1: Steal underpants
Step 2:
Step 3: Profit!!
Running a meadery is all about figuring out what happens in step 2.![]()
I like it. Nothin' fancy - parts all readily available and relatively cheap. My kind of engineering! ;D
I have an idea that might make it even better - what about if you take a pallet and cover it over with a cardboard "shell," and then spray some of that expanding polyurethane foam insulation inside the cardboard covering? That could be the floor you'd then set your totes on before you lower the cover assembly down from above, and an insulated floor will really increase the thermal efficiency - so running the setup will take a lot less electricity.
That's actually part of the plan. I just wanted to get to the part of the underpants gnomes before I forgot what I was going to write.![]()
Wait.
Are you telling me that you were aiming to get vodka to shoot out my nose?!