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#1
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My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping.
Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. 20 bucks. I told her to get it. 4-cup. Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? --Vic |
#2
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![]() "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping. Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. 20 bucks. I told her to get it. 4-cup. Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? --Vic I heard on the RV groups that it takes forever to make a pot on the 12 volts. |
#3
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![]() "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping. Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. 20 bucks. I told her to get it. 4-cup. Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? --Vic Like Calif Bill, I've heard 12 volt coffee makers are a joke. Think about something. A regular, 120 volt coffee maker typically draws anywhere from 5 to 8 amps when heating the water to make the coffee. At 12 volts that will be 50 to 80 amps. If you drink a lot of coffee, you'll also be burning a lot of gas running the engine, just to avoid a dead battery. Eisboch |
#4
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On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 20:28:52 -0600, Vic Smith
wrote: My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping. Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. 20 bucks. I told her to get it. 4-cup. Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? I third Bill and Eisboch. My brother tried one and it wasn't worth the effort. LIke Eisboch says, you pull a lot of power and it takes forever. Don't bother. |
#5
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On Sat, 22 Nov 2008 02:17:11 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote: "Vic Smith" wrote in message .. . My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping. Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. 20 bucks. I told her to get it. 4-cup. Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? --Vic Like Calif Bill, I've heard 12 volt coffee makers are a joke. Think about something. A regular, 120 volt coffee maker typically draws anywhere from 5 to 8 amps when heating the water to make the coffee. At 12 volts that will be 50 to 80 amps. If you drink a lot of coffee, you'll also be burning a lot of gas running the engine, just to avoid a dead battery. Last time I changed the fuze on a auto lighter it was 10 amps. So thirty minutes instead of three? Casady |
#6
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On Nov 22, 1:17*am, "Eisboch" wrote:
"Vic Smith" wrote in message ... My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping. Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. *20 bucks. *I told her to get it. 4-cup. *Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. *We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. *A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? --Vic Like Calif Bill, *I've heard 12 volt coffee makers are a joke. *Think about something. *A regular, 120 volt coffee maker typically draws anywhere from 5 to 8 amps when heating the water to make the coffee. At 12 volts that will be 50 to 80 amps. * If you drink a lot of coffee, you'll also be burning a lot of gas running the engine, just to avoid a dead battery. Eisboch- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It's the equivilant of droping the cars cigarette lighter in 4 cups of water. |
#7
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![]() "Richard Casady" wrote in message ... On Sat, 22 Nov 2008 02:17:11 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "Vic Smith" wrote in message . .. My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping. Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. 20 bucks. I told her to get it. 4-cup. Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? --Vic Like Calif Bill, I've heard 12 volt coffee makers are a joke. Think about something. A regular, 120 volt coffee maker typically draws anywhere from 5 to 8 amps when heating the water to make the coffee. At 12 volts that will be 50 to 80 amps. If you drink a lot of coffee, you'll also be burning a lot of gas running the engine, just to avoid a dead battery. Last time I changed the fuze on a auto lighter it was 10 amps. So thirty minutes instead of three? Casady Agreed. Something has to give. Eisboch |
#8
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![]() "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping. Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. 20 bucks. I told her to get it. 4-cup. Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? --Vic I like the old fashioned way. Propane burner and pot. Just toss the coffee grounds into boiling water. One the desired thickness, off the burner with a splash of cold water to help the grounds settle. 12V, must be a thick or warm cable when using it. Would be slow for sure. |
#9
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I make tea. A lot of it on the water. Somewhat easier, less fuss and
cleanup. In fact, my knickname for a long time with my mutinous crew was "Captain Twobags". JR On Fri, 21 Nov 2008 20:28:52 -0600, Vic Smith wrote: My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping. Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. 20 bucks. I told her to get it. 4-cup. Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? --Vic HOME PAGE: http://www.seanet.com/~jasonrnorth -------------------------------------------------- |
#10
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On Sat, 22 Nov 2008 02:17:11 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote: "Vic Smith" wrote in message .. . My wife called from the store where she's doing Christmas shopping. Same BS every year with kids, grandkids, parents. Bah, humbug, but there it is. She saw a 12V drip coffee maker. 20 bucks. I told her to get it. 4-cup. Which means 1 1/2 real cups. I drink a LOT of coffee, and thermos coffee can't compare to fresh brewed. We carry our a 10-cup on the road and always brew coffee in the motel room. A touch of home. Now I plan to make it when to stop at a rest area, using the cig lighter to plug it in. Anybody have experience with 12V coffee makers? Have to have coffee for my boat overnighters too, so I might as well be prepared. Tips? --Vic Like Calif Bill, I've heard 12 volt coffee makers are a joke. Think about something. A regular, 120 volt coffee maker typically draws anywhere from 5 to 8 amps when heating the water to make the coffee. At 12 volts that will be 50 to 80 amps. If you drink a lot of coffee, you'll also be burning a lot of gas running the engine, just to avoid a dead battery. Eisboch The thing was already here before I got the replies. Would I have listened anyway? 50/50. I just tried it out. Field & Stream 4-cup. Says on the instructions it takes 35-45 minutes. Actually took 32 minutes. Way too long for a rest stop. It's clumsy. Put it on the passenger floor and it was generally a pita, spilled a couple ounces of water. I think it gets the water through the drip orifice using very low power, which is why it takes so long. Wasn't very hot, though it brewed fine and tasted good. The real max water is about 14 ounces, heated to what feels to me about 165F, so if you like your coffee hot, forget it. The hot plate seemed about the same temp, and probably uses most the current. Putting more juice into the drip part and foregoing the hot plate by dripping into an insulated carafe would work better, but would make the thing even more bulky. The water I used was probably 50F, so doing a BTU/AMPS might be the best way to get battery drain. It's not like the home pot. This would be fine in a van where you had some space. Instructions say don't use in a moving vehicle, but who cares what they think. Probably never use it again. She paid 21 bucks with tax. They want at least +30 online with shipping. But it comes with a 1-year subscription to Field & Stream. Yeah!! I'm thinking of finding a real small gas stove to boil up a pint of water fast, and pour it in a small Melitta drip I have, or maybe get a French press. Thanks for the replies, I'm a dope. --Vic |
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