• oven 200 degrees 4 hours kilowatt hours

    From gtr@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 23 17:41:41 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, rec.gardens.edible

    Wife buys expensive apple chips.
    I say let's just make them (for free) out of apples.

    Just tried it. They're good. Sweet. Crisp.
    But.

    It took a whopping four hours at 200 degrees for just one apple.
    How can I maybe calculate (roughly) the kilowatt hours it cost?

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  • From Ed Pawlowski@21:1/5 to gtr on Sun Jan 23 21:44:20 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, rec.gardens.edible

    On 1/23/2022 8:41 PM, gtr wrote:
    Wife buys expensive apple chips.
    I say let's just make them (for free) out of apples.

    Just tried it. They're good. Sweet. Crisp.
    But.

    It took a whopping four hours at 200 degrees for just one apple.
    How can I maybe calculate (roughly) the kilowatt hours it cost?

    You can easily calculate the cost of running while the element is on,
    but once at temperature it will cycle. There is a calculator but I
    question accuracy as it does not take temperature into the mix.
    Maintaining 400 degrees will take more power than the same time at 200
    degrees.
    This would be more of a max number as a guide.

    https://joteo.net/electricity-usage-calculator/electricity-usage-of-an-oven

    Then there is this https://www.kitchenstewardship.com/cost-of-using-kitchen-appliances/
    Electric oven at 350 degrees = 12-19 cents/hour, depending on which
    figures you use

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  • From micky@21:1/5 to xxx@yyy.zzz on Sun Jan 23 23:17:12 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, rec.gardens.edible

    In alt.home.repair, on Sun, 23 Jan 2022 17:41:41 -0800, gtr
    <xxx@yyy.zzz> wrote:

    Wife buys expensive apple chips.
    I say let's just make them (for free) out of apples.

    Just tried it. They're good. Sweet. Crisp.
    But.

    It took a whopping four hours at 200 degrees for just one apple.
    How can I maybe calculate (roughly) the kilowatt hours it cost?

    It depends where you live. If you have the furnace on because it's
    January, any unused heat lowers the furnace cost. Of course electricity
    is probably more expensive what your furnace runs on but you can
    multiply by something.

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  • From Wilson@21:1/5 to gtr on Mon Jan 24 09:46:16 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, rec.gardens.edible

    On 1/23/2022 8:41 PM, gtr wrote:
    Wife buys expensive apple chips.
    I say let's just make them (for free) out of apples.

    Just tried it. They're good. Sweet. Crisp.
    But.

    It took a whopping four hours at 200 degrees for just one apple.
    How can I maybe calculate (roughly) the kilowatt hours it cost?

    I have a very simple Nesco that I picked up in a yard sale. They still make trays for it (link below) and I don't think it runs much electricity.
    Certainly less than an electric oven. They dry will in the sun with a little covering of cheese cloth. If you have a gas stove, you can get quite a bit
    done if your's still has a pilot in it.

    https://www.nesco.com/product-category/dehydrating/dehydrators/

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  • From Michael Trew@21:1/5 to gtr on Mon Jan 24 14:06:48 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, rec.gardens.edible

    On 1/23/2022 20:41, gtr wrote:
    Wife buys expensive apple chips.
    I say let's just make them (for free) out of apples.

    Just tried it. They're good. Sweet. Crisp.
    But.

    It took a whopping four hours at 200 degrees for just one apple.
    How can I maybe calculate (roughly) the kilowatt hours it cost?

    Doesn't matter in my neck of the woods, the extra oven heat is very
    welcome. Nothing to go up the chimney, all added heat to the home.

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  • From bob prohaska@21:1/5 to gtr on Tue Jan 25 00:08:14 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, rec.gardens.edible

    In rec.food.baking gtr <xxx@yyy.zzz> wrote:
    Wife buys expensive apple chips.
    I say let's just make them (for free) out of apples.

    Just tried it. They're good. Sweet. Crisp.
    But.

    It took a whopping four hours at 200 degrees for just one apple.
    How can I maybe calculate (roughly) the kilowatt hours it cost?

    Have you tried looking at your electric meter? Mine has an actual
    power display that reads to the nearest watt. If your base load is
    steady it isn't hard to see the peaks drawn by the oven and make
    an estimate of extra consumption. Automatic loads might have to
    turned off for the duration of the experiment, but the oven's
    signature should be fairly obvious.

    If you know the element wattage, just timing the thermostat
    click on and off will give a pretty good hint.

    bob prohaska

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  • From Peter Flynn@21:1/5 to gtr on Sat Feb 19 12:25:00 2022
    XPost: alt.home.repair, rec.gardens.edible

    On 24/01/2022 01:41, gtr wrote:
    Wife buys expensive apple chips.
    I say let's just make them (for free) out of apples.

    I had to look up what they were. Very finely-slices apple sprinkled with cinnamon that you bake. Sounds wonderful

    It took a whopping four hours at 200 degrees for just one apple.

    Four hours sounds about right to dry fruit: evaporating water is fairly power-intensive. My mother used to dry fruit at a lower temp but
    overnight, because her house had a dual meter which gave cut-rate
    electricity from 11pm to 8am.

    I'm surprised they haven't pre-dried them so that the oven time is
    limited to the amount needed for crisping them up.

    How can I maybe calculate (roughly) the kilowatt hours it cost?

    Heating up to temperature takes more than keeping it there for the
    remaining approx 3¾ hrs, so measure them separately.

    Read your meter
    Keep everything else on or off (ie no other changes)
    Turn on oven and heat to 200°F (watch that light)
    Note the time it took, and read the meter again
    Leave the oven at 200°F for whole hour
    Read the meter again

    Now you can work out how many Kw it takes to get to 200°F /and/ how many
    units it takes for every hour after that. Then multiply by the cost of a
    Kw from your electricity company.

    (Someone else check my logic here, please)

    Peter

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