About: One Sheet Solar Cooker   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The One Sheet Solar Cooker was designed in 2008. It is a clever panel cooker that can be fabricated from a single sheet of cardboard. The base is pulled together using a string tie. Assembly instructions: 1. * Use a cardboard sheet 60 cm x 80 cm or larger. 2. * Draw lines to divide in 2x3 parts, and cut "A" lines only. 3. * The dotted lines are all for concave folding, so you can make a careful "half-cut" and then it will be easier to fold. 4. * Make two holes, so that the string will go through the holes once the red parts are below the yellow part. The string is knotted like your shoes'. Not a permanent knot because you want to be able to take the kitchen to other places. 5. * Glue foil paper to the part of the cardboard closer to you. Maybe the inner side of som

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  • One Sheet Solar Cooker
rdfs:comment
  • The One Sheet Solar Cooker was designed in 2008. It is a clever panel cooker that can be fabricated from a single sheet of cardboard. The base is pulled together using a string tie. Assembly instructions: 1. * Use a cardboard sheet 60 cm x 80 cm or larger. 2. * Draw lines to divide in 2x3 parts, and cut "A" lines only. 3. * The dotted lines are all for concave folding, so you can make a careful "half-cut" and then it will be easier to fold. 4. * Make two holes, so that the string will go through the holes once the red parts are below the yellow part. The string is knotted like your shoes'. Not a permanent knot because you want to be able to take the kitchen to other places. 5. * Glue foil paper to the part of the cardboard closer to you. Maybe the inner side of som
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dbkwik:solarcookin...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • The One Sheet Solar Cooker was designed in 2008. It is a clever panel cooker that can be fabricated from a single sheet of cardboard. The base is pulled together using a string tie. Assembly instructions: 1. * Use a cardboard sheet 60 cm x 80 cm or larger. 2. * Draw lines to divide in 2x3 parts, and cut "A" lines only. 3. * The dotted lines are all for concave folding, so you can make a careful "half-cut" and then it will be easier to fold. 4. * Make two holes, so that the string will go through the holes once the red parts are below the yellow part. The string is knotted like your shoes'. Not a permanent knot because you want to be able to take the kitchen to other places. 5. * Glue foil paper to the part of the cardboard closer to you. Maybe the inner side of some fried chips bags. If there's no glue you may staple it. 6. * The bottle with the bottom cut off (and discarded, unless you find a use for it) helps in getting more greenhouse effect. You can place it on a circle made of sand so that it's more air-tight, so almost no heat should come out there. 7. * Inside the "greenhouse" you could place a glass jar, with its lid. Both the jar and the lid can be painted black with some kind of paint that doesn't produce toxic vapour when heated.
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