birdmancf
03-16-2014, 05:20 PM
Hey all,
I haven't noticed a thread on this but am considering it as a project before the sap runs... a friend of mine borrows my propane cooker to boil off sap to try to make syrup. I am leading him down the path of trying to do it right but never see him going in whole hog. This year I wanted to help him be more efficient than the single big pot on the fryer so I offered him a restaurant pan to have greater surface area. The thing that bothers me is that there is still so much heat that is wasted and never transferred to the sap. So I have started contemplating building a "Davy Jones" style evaporator with leftover arch board to insulate, a full and a half size restaurant pans(from my barrel stove days), with a single 55k BTU burner for the only heat source.
My question and concerns are about whether it will generate enough heat to get good boils, or will it just be a slow simmering dud. I figure if I can get inside the box temperatures of 600-750F I should be able to get good boilage. I know that flames will not tickle the bottom's of both pans, but does it have to when the temperatures are this high?
Any thoughts, experiences or considerations would be greatly appreciated before I embark on this endeavor.
Thanks,
Chris
I haven't noticed a thread on this but am considering it as a project before the sap runs... a friend of mine borrows my propane cooker to boil off sap to try to make syrup. I am leading him down the path of trying to do it right but never see him going in whole hog. This year I wanted to help him be more efficient than the single big pot on the fryer so I offered him a restaurant pan to have greater surface area. The thing that bothers me is that there is still so much heat that is wasted and never transferred to the sap. So I have started contemplating building a "Davy Jones" style evaporator with leftover arch board to insulate, a full and a half size restaurant pans(from my barrel stove days), with a single 55k BTU burner for the only heat source.
My question and concerns are about whether it will generate enough heat to get good boils, or will it just be a slow simmering dud. I figure if I can get inside the box temperatures of 600-750F I should be able to get good boilage. I know that flames will not tickle the bottom's of both pans, but does it have to when the temperatures are this high?
Any thoughts, experiences or considerations would be greatly appreciated before I embark on this endeavor.
Thanks,
Chris