This is pretty funny seeing as the modern brew technique for a Moka is typically to run it as slow as possible. Would be really cool to see someone like James Hoffmans take on this brewer, it's definitely really cool
This slow technique surprises me. I've found that the longer the heating and brewing takes, the more scorched and worse the coffee tastes. I assume it's because the dry grounds take on so much heat before the brewing process begins, that they effectively get burned. I've worked around this by boiling the water ahead of time in a kettle, then scrambling to assemble the pot to perform the brew with preheated water. Another part of my distate for the result comes from using aluminum pots, which leaves the coffee with a metallic taste. I just really like the angular look of the bialetti style, which I've been unable to find in stainless in the US.
@@Nono-hk3is forgot to mention but you typically preheat the water to boiling so the brew starts at a higher temperature but then you go as slow as possible without stalling the brewer. I really recommend looking up James Hoffmans moka pot exploration videos, they are very interesting and have taken my coffee to a much better place 😁
One part of a Moka pot design is that they normally don't reach the pressures an espresso machine does. There's one $700 Moka pot that does reach the several bars need though. If you ever do a rev 3, that's something to consider
Yes, and consequently the Moka doesn’t produce true espresso. It’s more like a brewpresso because the water just wets the coffee under atmospheric pressure. But the real tragedy here is that a back to nature man who appreciates spending time outdoors can’s spare a four minute ritual to enjoy a nice coffee! If you’re in such a hurry, save money and get a Keurig, my man!
@@shandor2522 what do you mean it just wets the coffee under atmospheric pressure? I am pretty sure even if boiling steam doesn't reach 9 bars, it reaches, according to google, 1.5 to 2 bars, meaning twice atmospheric pressure.
@@eccomi21 I acknowledge that some measly steam pressure is required in a moka pot to lift water from the lower chamber into the top where the coffee grounds are. The point is that neither this pot nor the new one expresses hot water through the grounds. They just wet them. That’s not espresso.
@@shandor2522 I did not notice that anyone claimed that mokka is supposed to be espresso, my point simply was that there are higher forces at work than just atmospheric pressure. I am quite the espresso nerd myself so no worries, i get the difference.
Awesome video, and completely over the top build, love it. Dump video tip: When adjusting the focus of your camera, if you're alone, bring a long stick with a piece of cardboard attached to its end. On the cardboard, stick a piece of white paper with black vertical lines, or a grid of dots, or any pattern that's kind precise (a target it good too). Plant the stick where you'll be standing when you're in front of the camera, and adjust the focus on that. The pattern on the piece of paper will be useful to calibrate precisely. Don't forget to deactivate autofocus ! And voila ! Now you're in focus, instead of the background
So we have this app with autofocus, sun positioning, azimuth calculator, star sign, and ham radio inegration so now you can focus. No thanks I got cardboard on a stick :)
@@jerbear7952You serious ? You obviously know nothing about cameras lol. What do sun positioning, azimuth calculator, star sign, and ham radio integration have to do about camera focus ?
Great design and great looks of that second part! Could it be possible to fix the leaks by hard soldering over everything with a brass or bronze coating? Anyway, thanks so much for this video, I loved it!!
@@TurboSunShine I hope your going to take advantage of what you have created by turning it into a product to sell in order to fund more projects like this. Seriously, as I'm sure you already know, many coffee drinkers take it very seriously and i feel confident that this could easily replace the typical coffee pot. Specifically, I can imagine a survival or a modern on the go one.
Dude your designs are incredible and have inspired me to make quite a few of my own these past few years. When it comes to optimizing designs for additive manufacturing, I really feel that your channel and skillset is unparalleled
They said the same for the Vajont's Dam, Chad. I'd better be safe than sorry.@@UnitSe7en Plus, it's actually a CLOSED system that is _systematically_ obstructed in a partially controlled way (filling the ground coffee powder), at every single use. But yes, at least the water quantity is known. Have I already said "better safe than sorry", Mr. Engineer?
@@bonovoxel7527 normal pots don't have a pressure valve either right? why build in safety features that are never needed. There is such a thing as being unnecessarily precautious.
I am italian, anyways no need in order to check a picture and realize that ALL COFFEE MOKA (its Moka. Not pot. That's for weed. Or tea. Moka.) DO HAVE A SAFETY VALVE and they always have had, by design. I link some images since it's rare. That someone clearly not having to do with the tool itself everyday feels so confident about a thing which's straight wrong. Moka. With the K. The valve is included. From a century at least. www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&q=moka&tbs=imgo:1 The valve there is the little bit on the lower half, below the thread line, sometimes silver sometime brass looking, it's that little pin the only protuberance you see on the lower part of ALL those shown Moka. It's hexagonal to be screwed in place, and changed if broken/rusted/obstructed. And yeah Wikipedia .com calls it moka pot but it's wrong. We don't call it moka tazza (tazza is pot) we just pour the moka content, INTO a tazza (a pot). No one would ever drink from the moka: Its inheducate, but mainly it's hot. Moreover, there's nothing around which is "moka" as adjective, without directly referring to that specific object, therefore no need to disambiguate from anything else. Like you don't say "a car vehicle", it's just a car. @@DrTheRich
Dude please continue with v2. I skipped past this video several times but finally watched it after watching your 3d printing with metal video. You impress me to no end. I feel like I am watching history in the making.
As an aspiring engineer, Barista and specialty coffee lover, coming across with this video as my first impression of your channel couldn´t be more fitting, Keep up the Great content!!!
Such a cool project! You might want to contact James Hoffman. He is an coffee expert who experimented with that things to improve Mokka pots. The slow heat clime was the biggest problem. 🙈 Greetings
I like how you spent the first part of the design solving the thoroughly solved problem of making a bunsen burner/blowtorch. This is what being an engineer is all about.
I think this would be great assignment or even thesis for university designers or engineers. The issue to be fixed is simple but how to tackle it is complicated. Great video!
Great video! Your video, engineering & explanation are all great. Now for the “….continued” version that fixes the pot and measures sound waves to detect the boiling!
you are soo underrated, let me tell yo uthis is the first inventionmaking video where I did not skipped the process part of video. Very amusing, lot’s of work done. Great
You are a genius man! I loved this project. Probably not economically sustainable (yet), but think about all the gas you are saving world wide, it really could have an impact! This improvement aside, the 2 version look soooo cool!
Hoping to be able to get this device in the hands of enough people to make a difference is the definition of a "pipe dream". The effort involved would definitely be better used to develop biomethane.
I've been brewing in a traditional turkish coffee pot on a gas stove for many years. never even springing for the Moka pot. But my idea was always to make the heating of the water more efficient by making essentially a sleeve that is slightly larger than my coffee pot and inside the sleeve is a set of 6 to 12 copper spirals that will essentially wrap around the pot all the way up the side to capture and direct all that excess heat which is currently pointing out and away from the bottom of the pot at the gas burner and direct it along the surface of the pot around and around and up and around while it's cooking and keeping the heat along the sides of the pot all the way up. Your project has inspired me to try to build my idea.
Missed the premier because I was making a cup of tea. I have to say though, that I'm very impressed (and a little jealous) of your space-age moka pots. I'm also impressed by Alpha Laser's treaded welder. That isn't the kind of tech you usually get to see.
Haha, was the first time for me too to get to try a laser welder! it's entirely different from traditional welding. Highly recommend trying it if you ever have the opportunity to do so. its crazy how small details you can weld together without much training!
Awesome video! I feel like the title is understating what you did quite a bit lol, you didn't just 3d-print a moka pot, you overengineered and printed the most expensive (non-functional) moka pot in existence!
@@TurboSunShine ahhh I see :D I don't know what works at all, so take my comment with a grain of salt, but I feel like a bit of click bait is 100% legit for a project as cool as that!
Hey, this is really cool! I have also 3D printed some backpacking pots, its an exceptionally expensive hobby... but you're definitely right that we have some of the coolest water boilers around camp ;)
Wanted to add that I made a calculator that can easily measure how much more efficient your mocha pot is over a traditional one. There is a video on my channel on how to use it, and I also don't mind hopping on a zoom call to explain it in better detail.
You're such a genius in this 3d printing world and I admire you so much and respect that you give out everything for free and open source! Kudos to you!
LOL this video combines all of my favorite things, lasers, coffee, engineering, 3d printing, testing and design, experimenting, fire, fire, and flames.
As a speciality coffee moka pot brewer, I always put boiling hot water in the bottom chamber to begin with. Otherwise, the coffee has a burnt note. Anyways, nice video and putting good science to the world of coffee 👏🏼👏🏼
GOODNESS....I just love your channel --- your new fan and sub --- really appreciate your effort wit and wisdom --- many folks don't know how much work goes into these videos -- I do....thank you.
Broo, love the video!! It was very cool to have you here in munich and a pleasure to work with you ;) Let's make a second episode next year! We will take over the coffee industry! xD
This is why I can't get anyone on my team to produce basic prototypes of parts. They always want to over-do everything and end up failing to meet deadlines because they think everything should be absurdly complicated.
Absolute madlad fixed the issue that didn't really needed a fix. Fascinating work! And thank you for explaining how the 3D printer works, I was so puzzled at the begining, but your explanation really helped! Subscribed.
Great Video. You really made my day 🙂. To design a pot that more efficiently uses the heat was on my mind since I was a young boy. Even I just was thinking of some much more simple design with some heatsink fins and guidance for the warm air. Big thanks to Alpha Laser that they support your project with their laser equipment. Many greetings from Germany!
You did a great job maximizing the heat exchange area between flame and water, but why cool the gas stream before it reaches the burner? Rocket engines cool their actual nozzles with liquid fuel channels but you don’t cool anything that holds the flame here.
Wish, 52k subs? Dude, this is a 5 million sub channel easy. You are incredibly charismatic on camera, and you're a flipping genius. Wish you the best of luck growing the channel
You are doing great science for the citizens of Finland. As the biggest coffee consumer per capita your invention could potentially pay back the time and money invested in tenfolds.
There are backpacking/camping pots that are similar in design. They have fins and channels that allow the flames to rise inside and harvest more heat. I think ease of cleaning is the most important feature of any cooking vessel, even if a little heat is lost. Some advanced exterior fin capture solutions can do a lot.
The funny thing is, I could see a youtuber spending hundreds of thousands of dollars and year of their life to make a product that already exists they were just too lazy to look in the first place
How does it compare to Jetboil's system? I like how they focused on a heatsink to increase the air surface area so that more of the flame's heat is captured before convecting away.
well it will save "you" 69 years, or 69 people 1 year or 525,600 people 1 minute to save your invested time, meaning you made the world a better place, no small feat if you ask me.
The first 19 seconds is a good example of how to correctly start a video imo. Properly succinct and had me hook, line and sinker right from the go haha
I hope there is a mokapot that easier to put the coffee in the basket, I hate spilled coffee mess... And wanted higher pressure to mimic espresso machine 😁
Thanks for the interesting video! Hope to see this quick "over-engineered" boiler powering an "over-engineered" steam engine sooner or later here in channel. ☺
man I just found this in Thingiverse wow appreciate yours affords! was very interesting I don't understand your motivation but geee you are really inspiring!
*@SunShine* My only question: *How do you clean those boiler designs?* Eventually it will become grimy, or get mineral deposits that will need to be removed, how would that be done?
Veramente affascinante. Verrà fuori acqua colorata al caffè, ma decisamente é affascinante tutto il processo, il lavoro e lo studio che ci sta dietro. ^_^
You could run the exhaust for the burner through the center of the coffee pot, similar to how a gas water heater works. Make the pot as tall as needed to efficiently capture all the energy. You could even have the exhaust tube spiral around the inside before it comes out. Nothing like spending way more time designing than you could possible save just to make coffee faster....but it's the challenge, right.
i fucking love this!!! please don't ever think that you're wasting your time! this kind of dedication to the craft is how really brilliant innovation comes about. the first steam engine was used to pump water out of coal mines lol.
I was just about to comment “build the stove in to the pot” when you pulled the switch up lol. I have dreamed of a titanium alcohol stove/pot/mug that stores the fuel, and grounds. I wanted a light stand alone system for day hikes where I’m eating snack and leaving my cooking kit in the car. Currently I use a titanium penny stove and mug with instant coffee for this purpose but there is room to shed grams and increase taste.
This is pretty funny seeing as the modern brew technique for a Moka is typically to run it as slow as possible. Would be really cool to see someone like James Hoffmans take on this brewer, it's definitely really cool
I'd send it to him if he wants to have a look at it :)
This slow technique surprises me. I've found that the longer the heating and brewing takes, the more scorched and worse the coffee tastes. I assume it's because the dry grounds take on so much heat before the brewing process begins, that they effectively get burned. I've worked around this by boiling the water ahead of time in a kettle, then scrambling to assemble the pot to perform the brew with preheated water.
Another part of my distate for the result comes from using aluminum pots, which leaves the coffee with a metallic taste. I just really like the angular look of the bialetti style, which I've been unable to find in stainless in the US.
@@Nono-hk3is forgot to mention but you typically preheat the water to boiling so the brew starts at a higher temperature but then you go as slow as possible without stalling the brewer. I really recommend looking up James Hoffmans moka pot exploration videos, they are very interesting and have taken my coffee to a much better place 😁
For camping though it's a huge benefit! Gas is hard to bring.
@@TurboSunShine yes! please send it to james, I'd love to se a collab
One part of a Moka pot design is that they normally don't reach the pressures an espresso machine does. There's one $700 Moka pot that does reach the several bars need though.
If you ever do a rev 3, that's something to consider
I think the 9Barista was $700 when it first launched but now you can buy it for $469. Still pricey, but not $700 pricey.
Yes, and consequently the Moka doesn’t produce true espresso. It’s more like a brewpresso because the water just wets the coffee under atmospheric pressure.
But the real tragedy here is that a back to nature man who appreciates spending time outdoors can’s spare a four minute ritual to enjoy a nice coffee! If you’re in such a hurry, save money and get a Keurig, my man!
@@shandor2522 what do you mean it just wets the coffee under atmospheric pressure? I am pretty sure even if boiling steam doesn't reach 9 bars, it reaches, according to google, 1.5 to 2 bars, meaning twice atmospheric pressure.
@@eccomi21 I acknowledge that some measly steam pressure is required in a moka pot to lift water from the lower chamber into the top where the coffee grounds are. The point is that neither this pot nor the new one expresses hot water through the grounds. They just wet them. That’s not espresso.
@@shandor2522 I did not notice that anyone claimed that mokka is supposed to be espresso, my point simply was that there are higher forces at work than just atmospheric pressure.
I am quite the espresso nerd myself so no worries, i get the difference.
Awesome video, and completely over the top build, love it.
Dump video tip: When adjusting the focus of your camera, if you're alone, bring a long stick with a piece of cardboard attached to its end. On the cardboard, stick a piece of white paper with black vertical lines, or a grid of dots, or any pattern that's kind precise (a target it good too).
Plant the stick where you'll be standing when you're in front of the camera, and adjust the focus on that. The pattern on the piece of paper will be useful to calibrate precisely.
Don't forget to deactivate autofocus !
And voila ! Now you're in focus, instead of the background
Love that tip!
I thought the out of focus was creative decision lol. great video
So we have this app with autofocus, sun positioning, azimuth calculator, star sign, and ham radio inegration so now you can focus. No thanks I got cardboard on a stick :)
@@jerbear7952 you cannot seriously be suggesting using a mobile phone as a professional camera
@@jerbear7952You serious ? You obviously know nothing about cameras lol. What do sun positioning, azimuth calculator, star sign, and ham radio integration have to do about camera focus ?
Love the overengineered version, looks like a jet engine! Will you reprint it at some point?
Haha, thanks, was told it looks like an energy core from Half Life 2 xD Will definitively re-print it when i get the chance!
Great design and great looks of that second part! Could it be possible to fix the leaks by hard soldering over everything with a brass or bronze coating?
Anyway, thanks so much for this video, I loved it!!
@@TurboSunShine Fast espresso moka pot, of questionable price value
@@TurboSunShine I hope your going to take advantage of what you have created by turning it into a product to sell in order to fund more projects like this. Seriously, as I'm sure you already know, many coffee drinkers take it very seriously and i feel confident that this could easily replace the typical coffee pot. Specifically, I can imagine a survival or a modern on the go one.
@@TurboSunShine How much would it cost you to print it again? Maybe you could crowdfund it.
Dude your designs are incredible and have inspired me to make quite a few of my own these past few years. When it comes to optimizing designs for additive manufacturing, I really feel that your channel and skillset is unparalleled
My only concern is a lack of overpressure valve (especially given the high speed boiling here) - easy to drill and thread a hole for one though.
oooops 😂
It's an open system that is never obstructed with a known quantity of water. It's fine, Karen.
They said the same for the Vajont's Dam, Chad. I'd better be safe than sorry.@@UnitSe7en Plus, it's actually a CLOSED system that is _systematically_ obstructed in a partially controlled way (filling the ground coffee powder), at every single use.
But yes, at least the water quantity is known.
Have I already said "better safe than sorry", Mr. Engineer?
@@bonovoxel7527 normal pots don't have a pressure valve either right? why build in safety features that are never needed. There is such a thing as being unnecessarily precautious.
I am italian, anyways no need in order to check a picture and realize that ALL COFFEE MOKA (its Moka. Not pot. That's for weed. Or tea. Moka.) DO HAVE A SAFETY VALVE and they always have had, by design.
I link some images since it's rare. That someone clearly not having to do with the tool itself everyday feels so confident about a thing which's straight wrong.
Moka. With the K. The valve is included. From a century at least.
www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&q=moka&tbs=imgo:1
The valve there is the little bit on the lower half, below the thread line, sometimes silver sometime brass looking, it's that little pin the only protuberance you see on the lower part of ALL those shown Moka. It's hexagonal to be screwed in place, and changed if broken/rusted/obstructed.
And yeah Wikipedia .com calls it moka pot but it's wrong.
We don't call it moka tazza (tazza is pot) we just pour the moka content, INTO a tazza (a pot). No one would ever drink from the moka: Its inheducate, but mainly it's hot. Moreover, there's nothing around which is "moka" as adjective, without directly referring to that specific object, therefore no need to disambiguate from anything else. Like you don't say "a car vehicle", it's just a car.
@@DrTheRich
Nice video, the collaboration was really fun and the end product is very promising. keep up the great work :)
Thank you so much! And thank you for making this project possible! You have a great product with an amazing team behind it!
Very cool project, thank ya'll for making it happen!
But the important question: How much $$ for you to print me one of those V2 burners?
can i apply so i can play, i mean, work with those toys, i mean, machines ?
Dude please continue with v2. I skipped past this video several times but finally watched it after watching your 3d printing with metal video. You impress me to no end. I feel like I am watching history in the making.
As an aspiring engineer, Barista and specialty coffee lover, coming across with this video as my first impression of your channel couldn´t be more fitting, Keep up the Great content!!!
This is the first time I could actually understand xQc.
Great video keep it up!
Such a cool project!
You might want to contact James Hoffman. He is an coffee expert who experimented with that things to improve Mokka pots. The slow heat clime was the biggest problem. 🙈
Greetings
I was just wondering what The Hoff would think of this
Yeah it could actually become a real product
I, for one, want both of these!
I like how you spent the first part of the design solving the thoroughly solved problem of making a bunsen burner/blowtorch. This is what being an engineer is all about.
I think this would be great assignment or even thesis for university designers or engineers. The issue to be fixed is simple but how to tackle it is complicated. Great video!
"this took over 250,000 worth of equipment to create" Me looking at a single sls 3d printer
Great video! Your video, engineering & explanation are all great. Now for the “….continued” version that fixes the pot and measures sound waves to detect the boiling!
you are soo underrated, let me tell yo uthis is the first inventionmaking video where I did not skipped the process part of video. Very amusing, lot’s of work done. Great
You are a genius man! I loved this project. Probably not economically sustainable (yet), but think about all the gas you are saving world wide, it really could have an impact! This improvement aside, the 2 version look soooo cool!
Hoping to be able to get this device in the hands of enough people to make a difference is the definition of a "pipe dream". The effort involved would definitely be better used to develop biomethane.
I've been brewing in a traditional turkish coffee pot on a gas stove for many years. never even springing for the Moka pot. But my idea was always to make the heating of the water more efficient by making essentially a sleeve that is slightly larger than my coffee pot and inside the sleeve is a set of 6 to 12 copper spirals that will essentially wrap around the pot all the way up the side to capture and direct all that excess heat which is currently pointing out and away from the bottom of the pot at the gas burner and direct it along the surface of the pot around and around and up and around while it's cooking and keeping the heat along the sides of the pot all the way up. Your project has inspired me to try to build my idea.
Missed the premier because I was making a cup of tea. I have to say though, that I'm very impressed (and a little jealous) of your space-age moka pots. I'm also impressed by Alpha Laser's treaded welder. That isn't the kind of tech you usually get to see.
Haha, was the first time for me too to get to try a laser welder! it's entirely different from traditional welding. Highly recommend trying it if you ever have the opportunity to do so. its crazy how small details you can weld together without much training!
I really like the way you test to destruction in plastic to inform your ultimate design in metal, especially around heat flow.
I love this. If you ever do a v3, consider applying some fluid dynamics to further optimize the surface area for heat transfer and gas flow.
Such a gool concept and technique
Congratulations on your multi-part optimization! Additive manufacturing needs more innovators like you!
I genuinely got hooked into a video I thought I'd never be interested in. Great job man! This deserves so much more attention!!!
Awesome video! I feel like the title is understating what you did quite a bit lol, you didn't just 3d-print a moka pot, you overengineered and printed the most expensive (non-functional) moka pot in existence!
I'll swich around the titles a bit to see what works best ;) thanks for the feedback!
@@TurboSunShine ahhh I see :D
I don't know what works at all, so take my comment with a grain of salt, but I feel like a bit of click bait is 100% legit for a project as cool as that!
Very cool. Can't wait to see the next version!
Hey, this is really cool! I have also 3D printed some backpacking pots, its an exceptionally expensive hobby... but you're definitely right that we have some of the coolest water boilers around camp ;)
Wanted to add that I made a calculator that can easily measure how much more efficient your mocha pot is over a traditional one. There is a video on my channel on how to use it, and I also don't mind hopping on a zoom call to explain it in better detail.
Cool stuff! Did you manufacture your designs yourself, or did you get them made?
That is such a cool project, very well done, thoroughly enjoyed it.
You're such a genius in this 3d printing world and I admire you so much and respect that you give out everything for free and open source! Kudos to you!
LOL this video combines all of my favorite things, lasers, coffee, engineering, 3d printing, testing and design, experimenting, fire, fire, and flames.
Nice! I think the final design also looks appealing, definitely something that is worth showing off not just only for the cool creation process!
So cool! The mesh appears to be broken when uploading the design to Xometry. They charge $1500 for a stainless steel print FYI
Thanks for checking! ahh, hmm, i'll look into it, might have made a mistake when puting my logo on it...
As a speciality coffee moka pot brewer, I always put boiling hot water in the bottom chamber to begin with. Otherwise, the coffee has a burnt note.
Anyways, nice video and putting good science to the world of coffee 👏🏼👏🏼
Ah, so they are just percolators then
@@stevendorries sort of. A more pressurized version with a few differences but yeah
32k subs? wtf?
YOU DESERVE LITERALLY 20x THIS MUCH.
Quality, editing, content are all great man!
THe funny bits are just soo cringy it hurts. Great engineering though
The funny bits are adorable! You’re just jealous
There was funny bits?
GOODNESS....I just love your channel --- your new fan and sub --- really appreciate your effort wit and wisdom --- many folks don't know how much work goes into these videos -- I do....thank you.
This channel is such a treasure of ingenuity and curiosity.
Broo, love the video!! It was very cool to have you here in munich and a pleasure to work with you ;)
Let's make a second episode next year!
We will take over the coffee industry!
xD
First the coffee industry, then the world! hehe! yes! was an amazing week!
This is why I can't get anyone on my team to produce basic prototypes of parts. They always want to over-do everything and end up failing to meet deadlines because they think everything should be absurdly complicated.
11:23 I feel that smile so much! Love the welding tank!
Cool video. Definitely gonna check out your other videos!!! Hope to see this in stores around my area!
Absolute madlad fixed the issue that didn't really needed a fix. Fascinating work! And thank you for explaining how the 3D printer works, I was so puzzled at the begining, but your explanation really helped! Subscribed.
yay! a new quality maker channel that is funny! 😍😍😍
Finally the algorithm is working. a Grinder and some paint makes me the welder I ain't. Great project!
Wow, that was an amazing journey.
BTW, thanks for the chuckles along the way.
Best new channels discovery ever! Cheers!
Great Video. You really made my day 🙂. To design a pot that more efficiently uses the heat was on my mind since I was a young boy. Even I just was thinking of some much more simple design with some heatsink fins and guidance for the warm air. Big thanks to Alpha Laser that they support your project with their laser equipment. Many greetings from Germany!
You did a great job maximizing the heat exchange area between flame and water, but why cool the gas stream before it reaches the burner? Rocket engines cool their actual nozzles with liquid fuel channels but you don’t cool anything that holds the flame here.
it's nice when you start to improve a coffee pot and then you find the new engine in your hands to reach distant planets
I love your methods excellent use of know how when prototyping!! I would love to see a fastest pot v2 sometime!
The reveal of the final design made me laugh. So beautifully overengineered. I love it.
Sunshine you are a huge inspiration. Love your designs
The hero we never knew we needed. I would absolutely use one of these for hot chocolate since I don’t like coffee.
Nice video and print! Totally want these for my next camping trip!
As a coffee addict and not a coffee snob, that first coffee making shot resonated with my soul.
Genius project, fun and informative video. Nice.
That is right up my alley! Good that the youtube algorithm presented me with this video, it knows me too well. Heel gaaf!
Good job. This was a very interesting project.
Wish, 52k subs? Dude, this is a 5 million sub channel easy. You are incredibly charismatic on camera, and you're a flipping genius. Wish you the best of luck growing the channel
You are doing great science for the citizens of Finland. As the biggest coffee consumer per capita your invention could potentially pay back the time and money invested in tenfolds.
Very fun seeing you re-invent a Bunsen burner at the start :p
Cool video!
There are backpacking/camping pots that are similar in design. They have fins and channels that allow the flames to rise inside and harvest more heat. I think ease of cleaning is the most important feature of any cooking vessel, even if a little heat is lost. Some advanced exterior fin capture solutions can do a lot.
The funny thing is, I could see a youtuber spending hundreds of thousands of dollars and year of their life to make a product that already exists they were just too lazy to look in the first place
Super fantastic! Fun project and awesome design. Thanks for sharing!
Hello there
@@vegastrix Thinkin' you oughta print this out on your Anet A8.... Imagine the flames!
This is beautiful. Thank you
11:55 some awesome kit!
just use a stainless steel italian stove-top coffee brewer with an induction stove and you have the most efficient way of burning water.
How does it compare to Jetboil's system? I like how they focused on a heatsink to increase the air surface area so that more of the flame's heat is captured before convecting away.
well it will save "you" 69 years, or 69 people 1 year or 525,600 people 1 minute to save your invested time, meaning you made the world a better place, no small feat if you ask me.
12 to 1 is good for the cone's ratio and a sleeve with a knurled screw works well enough to adjust the air being pulled in.
How is the inside of the pot to be cleaned? Hard water areas it will scale up after some uses.
You are the ray of sunshine we need in our life.. Thank you for doing this!
I do respect your thinking with regard to testing the efficiency to absorb heat of your final product by using mock-up 3D print models, I really do.
Interested in a collab on a proper grappling hook, you lovely psycho?
Besides SLS metal printing, there are plastic filaments which become metal when fired in a kiln, and there's also "lost PLA" casting.
The first 19 seconds is a good example of how to correctly start a video imo. Properly succinct and had me hook, line and sinker right from the go haha
I hope there is a mokapot that easier to put the coffee in the basket, I hate spilled coffee mess... And wanted higher pressure to mimic espresso machine 😁
This video is extremely funny as well as being highly informative. I hope your building this product, I’ll buy one1
When I see this video and the last one I cannot do more than imagine how many standard designs which can be dramatically improve with 3D printing 👏👏👏
subbed for the video title, video did not disappoint!
You should check out the 9barista.. though that one has been over-engineered to the point that it’s questionable whether it’s still a moka pot.
You, good sir, are a modern savant. The world is blessed to have just an Inquisitive mind
So glad to have found this channel. You do awesome work. Just finished your video on the check valve
Thanks for the interesting video! Hope to see this quick "over-engineered" boiler powering an "over-engineered" steam engine sooner or later here in channel. ☺
man I just found this in Thingiverse wow appreciate yours affords! was very interesting I don't understand your motivation but geee you are really inspiring!
love your channel brother. this video gave me so many laughs
*@SunShine*
My only question: *How do you clean those boiler designs?*
Eventually it will become grimy, or get mineral deposits that will need to be removed, how would that be done?
Descaler liquid is already a common maintenance item for conventional coffee machines. Nothing about this design would make it unusable.
Veramente affascinante. Verrà fuori acqua colorata al caffè, ma decisamente é affascinante tutto il processo, il lavoro e lo studio che ci sta dietro. ^_^
So what about trying to make one using the sintered technique? Or lost pla casting? I think there are more methods to try
Thanks for the files!! awesome work!!!
SOLID AF
Fun to watch!
You have to pre-heat the boiler, then start brewing it’ll be faster and better.
You could run the exhaust for the burner through the center of the coffee pot, similar to how a gas water heater works. Make the pot as tall as needed to efficiently capture all the energy. You could even have the exhaust tube spiral around the inside before it comes out. Nothing like spending way more time designing than you could possible save just to make coffee faster....but it's the challenge, right.
4:53 that 'lighter' head for the Butane can, what is it truly called and where can I get that please
glad to come by on this channel
Hi! love the design, what about safety? where's the pressure valve :D
i fucking love this!!! please don't ever think that you're wasting your time! this kind of dedication to the craft is how really brilliant innovation comes about. the first steam engine was used to pump water out of coal mines lol.
Great offer this one of the rare videos i enjoy tell the last sec .
I was just about to comment “build the stove in to the pot” when you pulled the switch up lol. I have dreamed of a titanium alcohol stove/pot/mug that stores the fuel, and grounds. I wanted a light stand alone system for day hikes where I’m eating snack and leaving my cooking kit in the car. Currently I use a titanium penny stove and mug with instant coffee for this purpose but there is room to shed grams and increase taste.
would tin or silver solder fix the leaky spots? might be worth asking
the best part about this 14 minute video about designing a faster coffee brewer is that he doesn't tell how fast it is.
12:55
@@TurboSunShine you allready know that is not the one in the thumbnail, why even bother answearing?