Gas-hob kettle or electric kettle?
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- woodpecker
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Gas-hob kettle or electric kettle?
I changed over from an electric kettle to a kettle for the hob (gas) some time ago (which I can also use on top of the wood-burner, if need be).
A friend has recently asked me for advice on buying a new kettle. She was thinking electric, and my response was, as far as she was concerned, a little left-field.
Is there any data on the relative power consumption of each type? I get complaints about 'it's slower' - fine by me! making a cuppa is not usually time-critical - but is there any energy data out there to back up my choice? Or to counter it?
A friend has recently asked me for advice on buying a new kettle. She was thinking electric, and my response was, as far as she was concerned, a little left-field.
Is there any data on the relative power consumption of each type? I get complaints about 'it's slower' - fine by me! making a cuppa is not usually time-critical - but is there any energy data out there to back up my choice? Or to counter it?
- adam2
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The electric kettle will often prove cheaper than a conventional kettle on a gas hob.
Electricity is more expensive than gas, but an electric kettle is almost 100% efficient.
A kettle on a gas hob wastes considerable energy, try putting your hand over it !
Gas and electricity prices vary a bit, and the waste heat from gas burning is not truly wasted in cold weather since it helps to warm the room.
All modern electric kettles shut off when boiled, with gas there is potential waste if you forget to turn it off promptly.
It would be advisable to have both.
The electric kettle will normally be quicker.
Cheapest is a wood or coal stove that is lit anyway for space heating, the extra fuel burnt is very small.
Electricity is more expensive than gas, but an electric kettle is almost 100% efficient.
A kettle on a gas hob wastes considerable energy, try putting your hand over it !
Gas and electricity prices vary a bit, and the waste heat from gas burning is not truly wasted in cold weather since it helps to warm the room.
All modern electric kettles shut off when boiled, with gas there is potential waste if you forget to turn it off promptly.
It would be advisable to have both.
The electric kettle will normally be quicker.
Cheapest is a wood or coal stove that is lit anyway for space heating, the extra fuel burnt is very small.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
- emordnilap
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When we changed from an electric kettle to a gas hob one, I would swear that the taste of my coffee improved.
Maybe not logical or provable, but it's my story and I'm sticking to it.
Maybe not logical or provable, but it's my story and I'm sticking to it.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
- emordnilap
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- woodpecker
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Hob kettles usually have a whistle. Mine does.adam2 wrote:The electric kettle will often prove cheaper than a conventional kettle on a gas hob.
Electricity is more expensive than gas, but an electric kettle is almost 100% efficient.
A kettle on a gas hob wastes considerable energy, try putting your hand over it !
Gas and electricity prices vary a bit, and the waste heat from gas burning is not truly wasted in cold weather since it helps to warm the room.
All modern electric kettles shut off when boiled, with gas there is potential waste if you forget to turn it off promptly.
It would be advisable to have both.
The electric kettle will normally be quicker.
Cheapest is a wood or coal stove that is lit anyway for space heating, the extra fuel burnt is very small.
- woodpecker
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- Joined: 06 Jan 2009, 01:20
- Location: London
It's quite possible. Hot water for coffee should be marginally below boiling point (say 96 degrees). I take my hob kettle off just as it's approaching boiling (the whistle starting to moan warns me, and I switch off). Water straight from an electric kettle will be too hot, resulting in the bitter stuff.emordnilap wrote:When we changed from an electric kettle to a gas hob one, I would swear that the taste of my coffee improved.
Maybe not logical or provable, but it's my story and I'm sticking to it.
- emordnilap
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Fair enough, wp but I knew that when I first started grinding beans and making real coffee, and I never let the electric kettle boil. Practically every herb infusion should have boiling water, imo, but never coffee.woodpecker wrote:It's quite possible. Hot water for coffee should be marginally below boiling point (say 96 degrees). I take my hob kettle off just as it's approaching boiling (the whistle starting to moan warns me, and I switch off). Water straight from an electric kettle will be too hot, resulting in the bitter stuff.emordnilap wrote:When we changed from an electric kettle to a gas hob one, I would swear that the taste of my coffee improved.
Maybe not logical or provable, but it's my story and I'm sticking to it.
No, I will, against any evidence, hold that properly-made coffee tastes better made on a gas hob than with an electric element in the water. Daft, maybe, but I am.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
Does the element "burn" the water, super-heating it and affecting the flavour, perhaps?emordnilap wrote:I will, against any evidence, hold that properly-made coffee tastes better made on a gas hob than with an electric element in the water.
Personally I think coffee always takes better from water heated in a Kelly kettle -- the woodsmoke in the nostrils sets a wonderful counterpoint to the flavour of the roasted coffee on the tongue.
- RenewableCandy
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- emordnilap
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Good, good - views supporting me. Good answer mobbsey.mobbsey wrote:Does the element "burn" the water, super-heating it and affecting the flavour, perhaps?emordnilap wrote:I will, against any evidence, hold that properly-made coffee tastes better made on a gas hob than with an electric element in the water.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
Colder air being drawn across the tongue, making the flavour taste different? I've noticed that cooking out in the cold weather does give a different "flavour" to the food, but I've never really stopped to think why. I've always thought it was a psychosomatic effect of my greater enjoyment of camping out in the Winter rather than the oppressive heat of Summer (I think my genetics must be part Sami!).RenewableCandy wrote:But can anybody tell me why TEA tastes different (and so much better) when drunk outdoors??
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Finally after 32 years my college tech study has a use
At point of use electric kettles are more efficent because the heating element is inside in direct contact with the water which means the casing can be insulated, ergo water heats up quicker.
Hob kettles have to be conductive so lose heat through the sides much more quickly. They are inherently less efficent as the water is heated indirectly, flame to metal to water.
In our world the inefficency of hob types is negated by the fact that they can be heated up by any fire, electric ones obviously need electric. The overall efficency depends on the generation method Kevin Anderson quotes a 13.3 to 1 ratio energy needed to energy at point of use. I have no idea how to calculate the ration for different fires.
So rather counter intuitively the apparently least efficent hob kettle would be best if heated on a fire that was already there for general heat. Next an electric kettle then a gas hob heated kettle. The difference in embodied energy between the kettle types would be insignificant compared to the energy used to heat the water through their life.
At point of use electric kettles are more efficent because the heating element is inside in direct contact with the water which means the casing can be insulated, ergo water heats up quicker.
Hob kettles have to be conductive so lose heat through the sides much more quickly. They are inherently less efficent as the water is heated indirectly, flame to metal to water.
In our world the inefficency of hob types is negated by the fact that they can be heated up by any fire, electric ones obviously need electric. The overall efficency depends on the generation method Kevin Anderson quotes a 13.3 to 1 ratio energy needed to energy at point of use. I have no idea how to calculate the ration for different fires.
So rather counter intuitively the apparently least efficent hob kettle would be best if heated on a fire that was already there for general heat. Next an electric kettle then a gas hob heated kettle. The difference in embodied energy between the kettle types would be insignificant compared to the energy used to heat the water through their life.
Scarcity is the new black