I’m looking for a home version of what we call a power supply at work, but I don’t know what search terms to use. What I want to do is reduce the temperature of a crockpot slightly so that I can use it to make yogurt.
The device plugs into 110V, and you plug a 110V appliance into it. It has a dial (variable resistor?) to reduce the current(?) to the appliance.
If I search for power supply, I only get computer power supplies. What term should I use? Any other options for doing this?
I was going to suggest a Johnson refrigerator thermostat, used in homebrewing to raise the minimum temperature in a refrigerator for the making of lagers, but I see that they have an operating range well below the creation of yoghurt. Perhaps there are other types of thermostat controls available for a higher temperature range?
Yes - that’s it exactly! Thanks. Unfortunately it appears there is no cheap option for these.
Thanks! You just answered a question I didn’t know I had - I’ve been trying to figure out how to make an 70 degree incubator for curing pepperoni also.
Your slow cooker will have some kind of thermostat - otherwise, it would just get hotter and hotter until it burns the food.
If the cooker has a mechanical thermostat, it’s still going to heat up to whatever temperature it’s set for. Reducing the voltage with a variac will only make it reach that temperature more slowly.
Newer cookers with electronic controls will probably not work at all if you reduce the voltage much below 110 volts - I’d expect it to blank out and refuse to do anything at around 90-100 volts.
So, the project is to adjust the thermostat, rather than adjust the electricity. Find what temperature your yogurt needs to incubate at, find a suitable thermostat and fit it to the cooker.
I scored a big 15 amp variac for $5.00 at a garage sale years ago. It still tickles me pink every time I use it.
On the yogurt crockpot:
An aquarium immersion heater should regulate the temp in the range you want. I think they’re about $30, but you might score one cheap at a garage sale or thrift store.
You could also go with a 40 watt light bulb and the thermostat from an old space heater, but that’d involve a bit more construction on yourpart.
Yoghurt needs about 110F. You could trial low wattage incandescent bulbs in your oven’s light socket, continuous run. A 30" oven might need 40w, though it will take a while to attain that temp.
Seems I was way off base comtemplating using a variac to do this - I thought they were most likely variable resistors, but since they’re variable transformers, it’s not going to work. Obviously, I don’t know what the hell I’m doing, but I never let that stop me before.
I’ve determined that I can just raise the porcelain part of the crockpot with mason jar bands to get the right temp. I’m still interested in other methods, and I will definitely dig out the heating pad we’ve got around here somewhere, and the aquarium heater I’ve got at work, and try different wattage bulbs in the oven.
Balthisar - Thanks, but I’m just going by the recipe I’ve found. Most of which say 110F, some of which say 116F. I’ll experiment once I repeat the original recipe.
Squink - But how would I use the thermostat? I’m most likely wrong, but I presume they are temperature specific, and most often not at the temperature at which I want them. If the thermostat is not calibrated to 110 - 116F, isn’t it worthless to do what I want, or do I just not know what I’m doing?
I’m not sure what kind of thermostat it is, but we had a coil type thermostat at a house I lived in in college. My “frugal” roommate insisted the heat not be turned up past 65, which would have been fine, except the furnace and thermostat were both in his room, not to mention he lived on the south side of the house. My other roommate and I got tired of always being cold in the morning, so one time when he wasn’t home we sneaked into his room and bent the coil. Walaa! The thermostat read 65, but was set at 70. Good times!
ETA: My point is, it may be possible to adjust the thermostat with a little bit of intrusive maintenance.
Someone upthread mentioned a Johnson thermostat, but it didn’t have the right range. Well, Johnson Controls makes LOTS of thermostats at different ranges and 110 °F to 116 °F is not an unusual range. However, given mangeorge’s quote above, getting a thermostat to control your crockpot is the more expensive route.