Price is a bet steep and I guess if you’re were too camp somewhere that you’re not allowed to have a camp fire then this product might make sense I guess for one person. It’s just not practical if it takes almost an hour to boil water, another forty minutes to cook on omelet per person. When you can make coffee, bacon, eggs and pan cakes in ten minutes to feed four people. If you were use a coffee pot and two frying pans(which would cost less to buy) of a camp fire.
This feels as if the technology is not quite there yet but it will be interesting to see how this concept develops over the next 5 or 10 years. In its current iteration, it doesn’t feel feel worth the time nor price.
I live in Arizona and we’ve actually tried a variation of this experiment with homemade solar cookers. (Tin foil in a box ,etc) When it’s 115° to 120° during the day, yes it’s very possible to use the Sun to help cook stuff.
Price is a bet steep and I guess if you’re were too camp somewhere that you’re not allowed to have a camp fire then this product might make sense I guess for one person. It’s just not practical if it takes almost an hour to boil water, another forty minutes to cook on omelet per person. When you can make coffee, bacon, eggs and pan cakes in ten minutes to feed four people. If you were use a coffee pot and two frying pans(which would cost less to buy) of a camp fire.
This feels as if the technology is not quite there yet but it will be interesting to see how this concept develops over the next 5 or 10 years. In its current iteration, it doesn’t feel feel worth the time nor price.
I live in Arizona and we’ve actually tried a variation of this experiment with homemade solar cookers. (Tin foil in a box ,etc) When it’s 115° to 120° during the day, yes it’s very possible to use the Sun to help cook stuff.
I think the times are estimated based on a sunny day, like with harsh sunlight
So you’re basically cooking food – energy from the sun with sunlight which is again energy of the sun lol
😋
Good luck if you live in Scotland 🏴