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The easiest and cheapest solution by far,.. GIVE THE **** UP!! Reject
your Dark Master at last and be free, free, freeeeeee!! Look how you're being controlled, unconscious sufferer; buying all this crap- $1000 generator? Kidding, right? A foo-foo french press? As if anyone wants anything French on their goddam boat. Filters, grinders, cups with stupid **** on them rattling around, a $2500 fridge to keep the half and half cold, a hermetic storage bin for Muffy's organic sugar, magic beans from far away lands- sheesh, you must have brain damage. Give it up now and at the end of your life you'll be refunded 6 free years of coffee break time. Time you can use to RELAX. Oh, forgot, you can't relax- your blood pressures over the top from all that caffeine. You're too ****ing spun from wondering where your next fix is coming from you snuffling addict. Think of all you'd save if you sold that boat and just sat in a Starbux shop with the cold sweats, starring numbly at passers by,.. It's high time you woke up, my friend,.. Peace is within!!! On Sun, 27 Apr 2008 10:06:41 -0700, Alan Gomes wrote: jeff wrote: Eisboch wrote: ... I've searched around looking for information on the safety issues of carrying a small, portable, gasoline generator on board for making morning coffee or whatever. I have a little Honda EU-2000 Inverter type generator that is small, light, quiet and completely self-contained. For my needs, I could fuel it on the dock, and it would have enough gas to serve the minimal morning coffee making needs for a week or more. No need to carry any more gas containers. ... Most everything has been said, but I can't resist putting in my two bits. First, There is really no problem with the Honda as long as its stashed in a place where any fuel leak will go overboard, instead of the bilge. I carry one in a cockpit locker that drains out the stern, and the spare gas stays in the dinghy hanging on davits. When its run, usually as a backup charging system, the exhaust is pointed out the stern. However, I must say that I find its too noisy to use in a crowded anchorage, especially if there is a boat directly behind. And running it first thing in the morning just to make coffee is decidedly anti-social. As for making coffee, a home style electric brewer is not needed, you can much better coffee with manual methods. Many prefer a French Press, but my favorite is a simple manual drip through a paper filter into a Thermos. I have a slight preference for a "gold filter" at home, but paper filters are much easier to clean on a boat. There are several other methods, but they are all just variations on the same theme: mix near boiling water with good coffee, that's all it takes. This of course leaves the question of how to produce boiling water - I'm assuming the you don't have a non-electric stove on board. (But then, how do you stay out more than a day? Do you intend to run a portable genset for every meal???) You could always get a small propane camp stove; the risks associated are probably less than carrying gasoline. There are some BBQ's (like the new Magma) that can easily heat a pot of water. Also, a microwave can boil a quart of water reasonably quick. Probably the best electric heater is a Bodum Ibis (or Mini Ibis), which can boil 1.7 liters in 4 minutes. Its total load for a Thermos of coffee would be about 10 Amp-hours, though of course a fair sized inverter is needed. Far most civilized than firing up a generator! Assuming that one does not already have a full sized, permanent gas or alcohol stove at the ready, I prefer those single burner butane "chafing" stoves used widely in wok cooking. In fact, I use mine almost exclusive for just heating up water or pan frying, saving my CNG stove for larger jobs (i.e., needing more than one burner) or for when I need an oven. Here's a nice picture of the one I have: http://tinyurl.com/6422hh. Lots of vendors sell even cheaper ones on e-bay. I get the canisters (that burn for an hour and a half or so) at a local Korean grocery store for under $1.00 each. (West Marine sells them for over $5.00 each!) Assuming you can local find a source for the canisters at a reasonable price this is a great option. --Alan Gomes |
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