@@josephlaliberte9899 hey, know it's been a long time but do you have further information on how the bypass valve works? a link to buy an appropriate one? thanks
You would need something like a Liebig condenser with something very cold pumped thru it. In other words, brew the coffee and then put some ice in it. LOL.
@@jubjuber1A vacuum regulator would in theory help but i dont know if it would slow the suction enough to let the coffee cool down before returning to the flask. But another concerns to look at is: 1.) Temp shocking; Basically hit a very hot object with an icy cold liquid and have it shatter. 2.) the flavor profile is very sensitive, if you keep the vacuum as is and have an arctic chiller where the coolant is 0°C (32°F) and youre rushing it downward after the initial boil, it may throw the flavor off completely. Flip side is if you have less vacuum, it may allow it too cool faster but wont be concentrated as well and it would be a lighter and bitter coffee because you didnt let it brew the right time and for too long and youre only will recover a good small amount. Best reccomendation: Just cool it after words without ice in a freezer for a few hours or do a cold pour with a whiskey ball.
If you don't like bitter coffee add saffron to the grounds. It's the best addition I have ever found for coffee. It milds dark coffee enough to really taste the coffee instead of the acid.
looks nice I like the lichtenberg figures! Maybe use glas fitting next time for a better look:) As a chemist I have to say -> the "coil" is an air cooler, the "coil" inside the glas one with silicon tubing is also a condensor but made for water cooling (via the tubing), your "bunsen burners" are just regular alcohol burners not actual bunsen burners, also you should clamp the condensors at the bottom not in the middle the will otherwise be more likely to break because they expend when heated (the should only held in place losely but the end)
i wonder if there's a workable way to transfer to a cooler capture flask, disassembling a huge glass stick with oven mitts on *before* I've had my coffee seems a little dangerous
Instead of a round-bottom flask, use a separatory funnel with a side-mounted heat source. when the coffee is done brewing just open the valve into a mug.
Angry White Conservative -- great idea. I was sure he would be using the separator funnel but I guess he wasn’t a Chemistry Major. I taught Microbiology and had a micro biology lab, chemistry lab, and a physiology lab at my use. (Graduate level) Man did I do some crazy stuff on my own. Guess the statute of limitations is up so there. Good Times Dude. William White would have been impressed!
The sintered glass disk of the "filter" is called a "Frit" and is designed to have a paper filter disk on top. Not to be used alone as the pores of the ftitted glass will clog. A whole lot easier to clean afterwards too. Paper disks come in various pore sizes. (Millipore is a manufacturer of filter papers in standard diameters. :) Notice that as the boiling flask cools and a vacuum develops, the pressure inside the system goes below the vapor pressure of the hot liquid and the solution boils again. Cool.
In the state of Texas, possessing any of this glassware without a proper permit is technically a felony, regardless of how its used. www.dps.texas.gov/RSD/Precursor/Laws/index.htm Enforcement is typically on a case-by-case basis, but its a risk you take when purchasing laboratory glassware.
@@Max-se3ii there is, he's just not using it right. After the water goes up you're supposed to turn down the heat and keep the water in upper chamber for a minute and stir. Then remove heat and drawdown
Johnathan you absolutely rock!! Finding this one in my email box was as delightful as any of the other tips you’ve passed on to us woodworking enthusiasts, very groovy stuff!!
Great project. I love vacuum coffee makers. If you ever revisit this project, consider supporting the coil as well as the funnel so you only have to remove the bottom flask. Happy daze.
Some of those components (more specifically the glass coil) are used for a machine that's known as a rotovap. What it does is creates a vacuum chamber in the flask (round bottom flasks) then it uses heated water to remove moisture from the sample but leaving behind the product of interest. The coils suck the moisture and as it travels it cools down to a liquid that you can then collect or dispose of.
Bro they look awesome, next time though mix the epoxy by hand. It takes longer but unless your pressure casting you'll never get the bubbles out. Looks awesome though man keep up the good work, thanks for the epoxy discount code I'll definitely be using that on my next epoxy buy.
The cost of these components have doubled on Amazon. This is a great indication of a great video. Well done, Jonathan. I'll put one of these together in a year or two when I can afford it. LOL
The prices he said are Way Off. Unless that was very, very bad quality glassware. If you are serious about this, look for Real laboratory glassware like Pyrex (easy to find, top brand). BTW, there is NO WAY a video like this affects the price of laboratory equipment. No Way. LOL. Cute thought though...
Actually it is a method of making coffee called the Siphon Method. I dont know if it is a laboratory thing, but Im a barista, I am really sure it is a siphon but you are a master of making that thing a beast!
this is a vacuum pot . similar in principle though . here the steam pressure keeps the water aloft. remove the heat and the vacuum pulls the coffee down. very similar to a siphon pot howevr those work on gravity alone
THIS is like a Japanese style'd coffee maker Drip Tower Cold Brew maker. This is something you can buy for like 400~. Great Video Could make this much cheaper
except that this is called a syphon, so it makes hot coffee and a cold drip is used for cold coffee. Also this isn't like Cold drip at all. You insert the cold water on top and the coffee is below, so that the water can drip down, into the coffee. With this syphon you put the coffee on top of the hot water. So you couldn't use this for cold brew you would have to change the whole thing. cold drip/ cold brew doesn't use vacuum to extract coffee oils. even though they look quite the same they work completely different.
This is by far one of the better videos I’ve seen on UA-cam where I’ve had a smile on my face through the whole process. I love the creativity in this my good man. I’ll be sure to use your promo code for my order. Keep kicking ass dude.
I saw the title and was like "yay!" . I watched the vid and was like "nah". It's Breaking Bad _style_ , yes, you could also say "laboratory style", that would be less misleading. The trick within the Breaking Bad coffeemaking contraption was to apply a vacuum to reduce the boiling point of the water, yet make it climb through the syphon. This makes a softer brew, while keeping a good stir but with less acid and bitter. This is a bit more complicated, though. It would be nice to have a flask with built in tap and an adjustable electric heater. The woodwork here is great anyways.
Mr. Katz-Moses, i would like to say that you have inspired me to start wood working!! you helped me set up my first table saw and not to mention many projects and saftey precautions. I would like to say your voice is godly as well!!!! stay strong brother!!
I work at a Starbucks Reserve, and we brew siphons a lot. Love the tea like consistency it gives off. And this is the most badass siphon brewer I've ever seen in my life. Starbucks Reserve NEEDS THIS ONE. thanks for the video now I need to make one of my own. Lol
That reminds me of an old toilet at 411 Central Avenue, Ocean City, NJ. It had a tank way up towards the ceiling connected to the toilet bowl by a long pipe. That baby could really flush!!🎉
You can get some fun reactions repairing old holed up pit bike seats with baking soda to fill in holes then covering that with some super glue then drape a fresh peice of donor material or pushed the old material back together and it works great. I freaked out the first time I saw foam smoke like that haha
by the way, with the distiller one, you can chill your coffee when the is brewing and have a nice chill coffee it will be more work and you have to figure out some parts but you can do an amazing chill cofee
you put another way to enjoy coffee, after that sublime smell of coffee getting wet with hot water, now you can see it rolling down before you drink. Dude, thats something.
I need to make one of these. A small safety tip: When pushing a glass tube through a stopper, use a little water as a lubricant. Also wrap the tube in several layers of paper towel so that if it breaks, the glass is contained and your hands are given a little more protection. You then grip the stopper in one hand and the tube in the other like a pair of bicycle handles. Apply moderate pressure and twist back and forth. DO NOT try to 300 pound gorilla the tube in. It will be more difficult and the chance to break the tube, impaling yourself with glass is much higher. Remember; glass is strong, but brittle.
This would last about 5 minutes in my house. Something flying through the air, toy or otherwise would end up shattering it. Additionally, the mood that I wake up in wouldn't allow me to be as happy and chipper as this guy is tinkering with it. I commend his upbeat attitude, but it looks like a similar amount of FUN would be had by cutting my lawn with pinking sheers.
I love this coffee! The Costa Rican Tarrazu coffee is amazing and I also like that it’s always roasted fresh and has a roasted on stamp. I drank black rifle coffee for a long time but this is a lot better and is also owned by vets and ex police officers!
When i was a kid,( b4 any of you wereee born) 😄 we had a metal coffee pot did the same thing. Filled the pot with water. A matching funnel type top with rubber gasket inserted into the pot. A strainer gizmo hooked into the funnel. Put grounds in the funnel. Turn on the heat and water would push up into the funnel. Let boill for a little and turn off heat. Coffee drained into the pot. First coffee pot i ever saw.
i miss digging around my grandfather's basement for weird contraptions from the turn of the century. i'm 43 now... my kids think a 1st generation iphone is a caveman relic. i'm going to make sure my grandkids have a treasure trove of analog devices to marvel at when i'm long gone... i hope they get the same pleasure i did :)
@Dominic the percolator was the next one. This one had a funnel like tub that sat on top of the pot. All the water rose up into it, boiled and drained back down after heat was off.
The only reason I enjoyed this video is that I was a scientific glassblower for over 40 years. I worked in both industry and at the university level making both production and custom glassware. I've written books on laboratory processes & procedures. Watching you struggle with identifying the items you were working with here was howlingly funny. Hopefully, no one will get hurt while making this; there are ample areas where they can. Good luck!
Ridiculously time-consuming to build and clean, a monstrous machine for the everyday task of making coffee. Do I want to build one...YES..! :) I have a vacuum coffee maker already and it's really fun to amaze my guests by turning the task of making an Irish coffee into an event. Got to love the way they work.
@@djpoizon2k9 Epoxy always creates a bit of heat, no matter how much or how little you pour. However, in smaller amounts, the total heat generated is less, thus it's not as noticeable.
Oh! You beat me to it! I’m planning a build of a cold-drip coffee brewer later this summer. I’m a total coffee nerd. We have like 8 different methods of making coffee in our kitchen alone. Great video! Beautiful machine! Awesome build, man!
If I could suggest a tool to add to your repertoire if you're going to mess with chemistry parts again, there's a set of needles use to cut standard sized holes in bung plugs with higher consistency and less effort than drilling
The helical tubes are to help improve the condensing of the gas sent through them. So for example, if you're distilling say Water. You'll boil the water at 99-101 degrees as controlled as possible, the steam will travel up from the spherical flask, and then into your condensing tube. Which (for this propose) should have a cold liquid flowing through a charger around the tube. But if we replace our tube, with a helical/helix tube (spiral glass tube), we're increasing the surface area for the steam to touch, and quickly loose it's heat energy to the glass and coolant. So their essentially to increase surface area for condensing liquids and gases.
@@katzmosestools hence why your second(?) brewing stand has a glass chamber around the helix :p water goes in the top, and then drained out the bottom. That's essentially how Distilling alcohol from water works, if you want to collect it afterwards. Set to 78(?)DegC and the Alcohol steams up to the condenser.
@@agapitoserrato9126 A gooch crucible differs in that it doesn't have the tapered funnel base. Traditionally the gooch crucible is going to be more sturdy and made of porcelain because they are often exposed to high heat for gravimetric analysis.
You know! You being the dovetail master I thought you were going to dovetail the bottom board and then hang it on the wall lol. Great project! I’ll have to give it a try sometime.
Thanks for the discount for the Daily Roast coffee. The video was fun but I was not your target audience. I never saw Breaking Bad. I purchased a coffee siphon, but it sits in its box in my pile of rarely used appliances. It took a lot of time and effort to make a mediocre cup of coffee.
pretty sure the curing reaction is always exothermic... the problem is just, that sometimes it produces so much heat that it heats up too far which causes the bubbles?
Visually, these are similar to the Dutch style setups that got more or less perfected in Japan and Korea, although obviously they work very differently. The Dutch ones work where you put ice and some water in the top, then have a drip valve to control the flow rate and then in the middle it'll drips to go through the grinds, then through the coils to a collection vessel. They make a really concentrated brew although it takes quite a lot of time and the setups are usually really expensive.
Absolutely ridiculously time consuming way of making coffee. Starting this project tomorrow.
Hahahaha
Add a bypass valve to put it straight to your cup
just use vaporization
@@josephlaliberte9899 hey, know it's been a long time but do you have further information on how the bypass valve works? a link to buy an appropriate one? thanks
THERE IS NO TOMORROW, THERE IS... NO TOMORROW
If you pumped ice water through the condenser for the red-epoxy one you could get awesome iced coffee
No, have you seen how fast it gets sucked through? In that timespan you don't cool it by any significant degree
@@NavySeal2k add a valve?
You would need something like a Liebig condenser with something very cold pumped thru it. In other words, brew the coffee and then put some ice in it. LOL.
@@jubjuber1A vacuum regulator would in theory help but i dont know if it would slow the suction enough to let the coffee cool down before returning to the flask. But another concerns to look at is:
1.) Temp shocking; Basically hit a very hot object with an icy cold liquid and have it shatter.
2.) the flavor profile is very sensitive, if you keep the vacuum as is and have an arctic chiller where the coolant is 0°C (32°F) and youre rushing it downward after the initial boil, it may throw the flavor off completely. Flip side is if you have less vacuum, it may allow it too cool faster but wont be concentrated as well and it would be a lighter and bitter coffee because you didnt let it brew the right time and for too long and youre only will recover a good small amount.
Best reccomendation: Just cool it after words without ice in a freezer for a few hours or do a cold pour with a whiskey ball.
Co-worker: So, how do you like your coffee?
Me: Uhh, it's complicated.
best comment of the bunch! LOL!!
Well, I start with a slab of wood...
Gale boetticher style!
You forgot the chili powder yo.
LOL
😂
Nope saffron ALWAYS! At least when you spend this much time on it!
Chili P!!!!
Yeah Bitch
If you don't like bitter coffee add saffron to the grounds. It's the best addition I have ever found for coffee. It milds dark coffee enough to really taste the coffee instead of the acid.
oh yeah let me just get my shaker of the worlds most expensive spice
No chicory is far better and far cheaper
@@jasonwhipple4675 Luzianne coffee rocks.
Does it look unnecessarly laborious?
Yes
Do I want it?
*Of course*
Embedded LEDs behind the resin could make for some really cool effects. Light glowing through the resin and the lab glass.
what a cool idea!
looks nice I like the lichtenberg figures! Maybe use glas fitting next time for a better look:)
As a chemist I have to say ->
the "coil" is an air cooler, the "coil" inside the glas one with silicon tubing is also a condensor but made for water cooling (via the tubing), your "bunsen burners" are just regular alcohol burners not actual bunsen burners, also you should clamp the condensors at the bottom not in the middle the will otherwise be more likely to break because they expend when heated (the should only held in place losely but the end)
You took the word’s out of my mouth!
Not to get too technical, but shouldn't you do this video in a motor home wearing tighty whiteys?
Hahahaha
I’m not sure UA-cam is ready for that
Actually he should be underground in a chicken factory with a guy named gale
Not to technical is this guys BITCH
...I meant specialty
@@heythe4892 Excuse me, but I'm having severe technical issue of understanding that sentence ... Maybe you should get technical with your words
i wonder if there's a workable way to transfer to a cooler capture flask, disassembling a huge glass stick with oven mitts on *before* I've had my coffee seems a little dangerous
Instead of a round-bottom flask, use a separatory funnel with a side-mounted heat source. when the coffee is done brewing just open the valve into a mug.
Angry White Conservative -- great idea. I was sure he would be using the separator funnel but I guess he wasn’t a Chemistry Major. I taught Microbiology and had a micro biology lab, chemistry lab, and a physiology lab at my use. (Graduate level) Man did I do some crazy stuff on my own. Guess the statute of limitations is up so there. Good Times Dude. William White would have been impressed!
@@MJ-nb1qn who the fuck is William white?
@@rokstr222ify one of the raddist fuckin dudes alive!
@@limptera13 mad rad lad
The sintered glass disk of the "filter" is called a "Frit" and is designed to have a paper filter disk on top. Not to be used alone as the pores of the ftitted glass will clog. A whole lot easier to clean afterwards too. Paper disks come in various pore sizes. (Millipore is a manufacturer of filter papers in standard diameters. :)
Notice that as the boiling flask cools and a vacuum develops, the pressure inside the system goes below the vapor pressure of the hot liquid and the solution boils again. Cool.
So you should use a paper with smaller pores than the pores of the frit?
Can you imagine your house being searched by police issuing a warrant and they find this coffee maker 😂
If I owned that it’d be running coffee constantly.
J what if you put some meth in your coffe just for the morning kick
Cops love coffee and donuts bahaha😂
Add A fryer for donuts and have a party 👍
In the state of Texas, possessing any of this glassware without a proper permit is technically a felony, regardless of how its used. www.dps.texas.gov/RSD/Precursor/Laws/index.htm Enforcement is typically on a case-by-case basis, but its a risk you take when purchasing laboratory glassware.
Honey, I'm making coffee, did you happen to see where I left my welding gloves ?
Send one to James Hoffman. I want to see what a coffee connoisseur thinks of this method
Its a french press with less control... What more do you wanna know?
Theres no time for the immersion brewing to take place, so it probably tastes pretty weak.
@@Max-se3ii there is, he's just not using it right. After the water goes up you're supposed to turn down the heat and keep the water in upper chamber for a minute and stir. Then remove heat and drawdown
and not a scale in sight
@@karlkarlng I think it's more like a siphon brewer. Which James has made a video about already.
Johnathan you absolutely rock!! Finding this one in my email box was as delightful as any of the other tips you’ve passed on to us woodworking enthusiasts, very groovy stuff!!
Great project. I love vacuum coffee makers. If you ever revisit this project, consider supporting the coil as well as the funnel so you only have to remove the bottom flask. Happy daze.
Actually really enjoyed the montage parts. Maybe it was just the bud but it looked cool. Almost like a tool commercial
Some of those components (more specifically the glass coil) are used for a machine that's known as a rotovap. What it does is creates a vacuum chamber in the flask (round bottom flasks) then it uses heated water to remove moisture from the sample but leaving behind the product of interest. The coils suck the moisture and as it travels it cools down to a liquid that you can then collect or dispose of.
James Hoffman is shivering
Bro they look awesome, next time though mix the epoxy by hand. It takes longer but unless your pressure casting you'll never get the bubbles out. Looks awesome though man keep up the good work, thanks for the epoxy discount code I'll definitely be using that on my next epoxy buy.
The cost of these components have doubled on Amazon. This is a great indication of a great video. Well done, Jonathan.
I'll put one of these together in a year or two when I can afford it. LOL
as a glass blower i was shocked by the prices he quoted. We sell that equipment at much higher price points.
The prices he said are Way Off. Unless that was very, very bad quality glassware. If you are serious about this, look for Real laboratory glassware like Pyrex (easy to find, top brand). BTW, there is NO WAY a video like this affects the price of laboratory equipment. No Way. LOL. Cute thought though...
Actually it is a method of making coffee called the Siphon Method. I dont know if it is a laboratory thing, but Im a barista, I am really sure it is a siphon but you are a master of making that thing a beast!
this is a vacuum pot . similar in principle though . here the steam pressure keeps the water aloft. remove the heat and the vacuum pulls the coffee down. very similar to a siphon pot howevr those work on gravity alone
Luke Hawkinson actually, no. siphons work the same way. vacuum pot is just another name for it.
THIS is like a Japanese style'd coffee maker Drip Tower Cold Brew maker. This is something you can buy for like 400~. Great Video Could make this much cheaper
except that this is called a syphon, so it makes hot coffee and a cold drip is used for cold coffee. Also this isn't like Cold drip at all. You insert the cold water on top and the coffee is below, so that the water can drip down, into the coffee. With this syphon you put the coffee on top of the hot water. So you couldn't use this for cold brew you would have to change the whole thing. cold drip/ cold brew doesn't use vacuum to extract coffee oils. even though they look quite the same they work completely different.
This is by far one of the better videos I’ve seen on UA-cam where I’ve had a smile on my face through the whole process. I love the creativity in this my good man. I’ll be sure to use your promo code for my order. Keep kicking ass dude.
Thanks my friend!
Boil water, add strain of choice and coffee remove heat and let coffee maker do its magic. Wala!! You have the best coffee in the house!!
I saw the title and was like "yay!" . I watched the vid and was like "nah". It's Breaking Bad _style_ , yes, you could also say "laboratory style", that would be less misleading. The trick within the Breaking Bad coffeemaking contraption was to apply a vacuum to reduce the boiling point of the water, yet make it climb through the syphon. This makes a softer brew, while keeping a good stir but with less acid and bitter. This is a bit more complicated, though. It would be nice to have a flask with built in tap and an adjustable electric heater. The woodwork here is great anyways.
Also the rubber stoppers here would add an off flavor. The one on breaking bad likely used glass joints and vacuum grease.
Mr. Katz-Moses, i would like to say that you have inspired me to start wood working!! you helped me set up my first table saw and not to mention many projects and saftey precautions. I would like to say your voice is godly as well!!!! stay strong brother!!
I work at a Starbucks Reserve, and we brew siphons a lot. Love the tea like consistency it gives off. And this is the most badass siphon brewer I've ever seen in my life. Starbucks Reserve NEEDS THIS ONE. thanks for the video now I need to make one of my own. Lol
I could commission one for every store hahaha
Absolutely ridiculous and totally awesome. Love the idea and the electrical wood burns you put in. Well done. Keep it up.
The Tony Montana line I paused the video and went to hit that subscribe button 😎
I mean.
It's kind of impressive.The fact you went out of your way to make something that looks nothing like the coffee machine from breaking bad
so glad you didn't use any type of glue when you assembled the parts, any type of industrial glue is dangerous if consumed
except food-grade glue obviouly. (which either doesn't leech or is safe to ingest.)
That lacewood is absolutely beautiful
"They roast it right before they send it"
*Bag says 2018*
He must have bought it a year before :))
That is CRAZY FREAKING AWESOME
Looks like you used a normal bit for the rubber stopper. A sharpened piece of brass tubing and a bit of water makes for an easier hole.
That reminds me of an old toilet at 411 Central Avenue, Ocean City, NJ. It had a tank way up towards the ceiling connected to the toilet bowl by a long pipe. That baby could really flush!!🎉
You had me at, "Tony Montana spoon." LOL! I wonder how many people actually got the reference.
I didn't. What's it from?
@@befmx31 Scarface
As in coke 🥄
Wondering where he got them
Tony at one point just started using his hands to line up half a zip to the face I think the spoon might be a tad too small.
Getting my shop next month. This will be the first project(even before my workbench!)
This little Tony Montana spoon. xD dead. Knowing that joke went over so many young minds is just priceless.
Watch out for your second coffee maker! It can blow everything up!!
Correction: The exothermic reaction is the epoxy curing itself, and the bubbly surface and overheating is simply a result of that.
You can get some fun reactions repairing old holed up pit bike seats with baking soda to fill in holes then covering that with some super glue then drape a fresh peice of donor material or pushed the old material back together and it works great. I freaked out the first time I saw foam smoke like that haha
Wow! I'm from Costa Rica and I feel so proud that he is using costarican coffee!!
I LOVE Costa Rican coffee
by the way, with the distiller one, you can chill your coffee when the is brewing and have a nice chill coffee it will be more work and you have to figure out some parts but you can do an amazing chill cofee
you put another way to enjoy coffee, after that sublime smell of coffee getting wet with hot water, now you can see it rolling down before you drink. Dude, thats something.
I need to make one of these.
A small safety tip:
When pushing a glass tube through a stopper, use a little water as a lubricant. Also wrap the tube in several layers of paper towel so that if it breaks, the glass is contained and your hands are given a little more protection. You then grip the stopper in one hand and the tube in the other like a pair of bicycle handles. Apply moderate pressure and twist back and forth. DO NOT try to 300 pound gorilla the tube in. It will be more difficult and the chance to break the tube, impaling yourself with glass is much higher. Remember; glass is strong, but brittle.
Great advice bud
This would last about 5 minutes in my house. Something flying through the air, toy or otherwise would end up shattering it. Additionally, the mood that I wake up in wouldn't allow me to be as happy and chipper as this guy is tinkering with it. I commend his upbeat attitude, but it looks like a similar amount of FUN would be had by cutting my lawn with pinking sheers.
So it’s basically a syphon coffee maker, but more complicated, i love it
Outstanding project! Thank you Sr.
Perhaps in the future you can try doing a balancing siphon version instead? I would love to see that!
wow . you are a real ARTIST
That is so cool. I’m absolutely going to make one of those. Great idea
Hahahah Tony Monana Spoon hahahahah
I know you meant Montana but it came out wrong...love your videos and projects brother
You have a lot more space for the coffee maker and patience waiting for it to brew. I need my morning brew a lot quicker!🤣
For me as a chemist.. its really weird but also pretty cool!
Once I will try that too!
Great job man 👌🏻
I love this coffee! The Costa Rican Tarrazu coffee is amazing and I also like that it’s always roasted fresh and has a roasted on stamp. I drank black rifle coffee for a long time but this is a lot better and is also owned by vets and ex police officers!
This is such a cool project!! All of my fantasies in one package (chemistry, woodworking, epoxy, Lichtenberg)!|| Thank you for sharing...
Excellent project and explanations
That is awesome. I bet you that is the best science made coffee ever
12:42 - 12:45 I love the addition of Jesse lol
When i was a kid,( b4 any of you wereee born) 😄 we had a metal coffee pot did the same thing. Filled the pot with water. A matching funnel type top with rubber gasket inserted into the pot. A strainer gizmo hooked into the funnel. Put grounds in the funnel. Turn on the heat and water would push up into the funnel. Let boill for a little and turn off heat. Coffee drained into the pot. First coffee pot i ever saw.
i miss digging around my grandfather's basement for weird contraptions from the turn of the century. i'm 43 now... my kids think a 1st generation iphone is a caveman relic. i'm going to make sure my grandkids have a treasure trove of analog devices to marvel at when i'm long gone... i hope they get the same pleasure i did :)
@Dominic the percolator was the next one. This one had a funnel like tub that sat on top of the pot. All the water rose up into it, boiled and drained back down after heat was off.
"I take my coffee VERY seriously"....proceeds to put "scoops" of coffee rather than measuring.
I like how you sorta sound like Hank!
There's a restaurant in downtown Phoenix that makes coffee that way. Best coffee I've ever had.
The only reason I enjoyed this video is that I was a scientific glassblower for over 40 years. I worked in both industry and at the university level making both production and custom glassware. I've written books on laboratory processes & procedures. Watching you struggle with identifying the items you were working with here was howlingly funny. Hopefully, no one will get hurt while making this; there are ample areas where they can. Good luck!
This seems like it's heavily inspired by Peter McKinnon. Awesome project!
I love Peter McKinnon!
Ridiculously time-consuming to build and clean, a monstrous machine for the everyday task of making coffee.
Do I want to build one...YES..! :)
I have a vacuum coffee maker already and it's really fun to amaze my guests by turning the task of making an Irish coffee into an event.
Got to love the way they work.
12/10 production quality
This is the best video I’ve ever seen. I have to try this.
First of your vids I've seen. Many inspired concepts here. Love the craft and the coffee as a central
Once again....Grand Slam project!! Excellent work Jonathan!!!!
Those are gonna break like a BONG!
Well, that's a extended syphon coffee maker. So creative you make it different!
One of best diy vid on the platform
Thanks bud!
Amazing project, I might have to give this a go
I learned everything I know about endothermic reactions by watching South Park...
endothermic reactions? I learned that in Evangelion
Except that he said that too much epoxy poured can create an Exothermic reaction (gives off heat). Endothermic reactions require heat to work. :)
@@djpoizon2k9 Epoxy always creates a bit of heat, no matter how much or how little you pour. However, in smaller amounts, the total heat generated is less, thus it's not as noticeable.
Oh! You beat me to it! I’m planning a build of a cold-drip coffee brewer later this summer. I’m a total coffee nerd. We have like 8 different methods of making coffee in our kitchen alone. Great video! Beautiful machine! Awesome build, man!
Definitely going to build a cold brew machine soon.
If I could suggest a tool to add to your repertoire if you're going to mess with chemistry parts again, there's a set of needles use to cut standard sized holes in bung plugs with higher consistency and less effort than drilling
love the cinematography in the epoxy mixing scene!!!
Thanks bud!
The helical tubes are to help improve the condensing of the gas sent through them.
So for example, if you're distilling say Water. You'll boil the water at 99-101 degrees as controlled as possible, the steam will travel up from the spherical flask, and then into your condensing tube. Which (for this propose) should have a cold liquid flowing through a charger around the tube. But if we replace our tube, with a helical/helix tube (spiral glass tube), we're increasing the surface area for the steam to touch, and quickly loose it's heat energy to the glass and coolant.
So their essentially to increase surface area for condensing liquids and gases.
Great knowledge drop bud
@@katzmosestools hence why your second(?) brewing stand has a glass chamber around the helix :p water goes in the top, and then drained out the bottom.
That's essentially how Distilling alcohol from water works, if you want to collect it afterwards. Set to 78(?)DegC and the Alcohol steams up to the condenser.
BRILLIANT use of wood, glass and resin! and YES - Let's make a video on how to make epoxy fun!!!!
The "funnel flask" is a pretty accurate description of the piece but it's more technical name is a "sintered glass Buchner funnel"
And what is the difference between a Gooch crucible and a sintered glass buchner funnel?
@@agapitoserrato9126 A gooch crucible differs in that it doesn't have the tapered funnel base. Traditionally the gooch crucible is going to be more sturdy and made of porcelain because they are often exposed to high heat for gravimetric analysis.
there are usually filter inserts available for those buchner funnels that you can use as a coffee filter
You know! You being the dovetail master I thought you were going to dovetail the bottom board and then hang it on the wall lol. Great project! I’ll have to give it a try sometime.
Thanks for the discount for the Daily Roast coffee. The video was fun but I was not your target audience. I never saw Breaking Bad. I purchased a coffee siphon, but it sits in its box in my pile of rarely used appliances. It took a lot of time and effort to make a mediocre cup of coffee.
pretty sure the curing reaction is always exothermic... the problem is just, that sometimes it produces so much heat that it heats up too far which causes the bubbles?
I'm a chemist, exclusively on UA-cam, and I'd say you nailed it. 😉👍
Visually, these are similar to the Dutch style setups that got more or less perfected in Japan and Korea, although obviously they work very differently.
The Dutch ones work where you put ice and some water in the top, then have a drip valve to control the flow rate and then in the middle it'll drips to go through the grinds, then through the coils to a collection vessel. They make a really concentrated brew although it takes quite a lot of time and the setups are usually really expensive.
I wanna make one now. Thanks for the share
Wonder how long I could have this in my office before eyebrows starting going up? Donuts + Coffee is life in my business.
Awesome build!!!
Either needs a valve or a pivot/ swing to pour the coffee. Such a sick project! Love it!
So impractical, and I love it!
Only if you love coffee, I can love you.
Subbed.
Gale Boetticher would be proud!
Your B-roll footage is so well done
Willing to by this coffee maker
Yeah, I'm gonna have to build this. Talk about a conversation piece.
This was awesome
Good man you are using coffee from my country Costa Rica one of the best in the world.
I've been to Costa Rica. It's gorgeous!
@@katzmosestools Thats good man come whenever you want , you are always welcome.