Though the induction cooker is 2000 watts, it heats very quickly. Cooks more evenly as the whole pan or pot heats up instead of where the heating elements touches the pan or pot. You also have precise cooking temperature that is consistent. Neither gas or electric can offer that. All my cooking at home is only on the induction cooktop. Since using my induction cookers, I have slashed my electric bills considerably. For those who have not yet purchased an induction cooker, make sure that you use magnetic pots or pans. Glass, aluminium, copper or even non-magnetic stainless steel will not work. So when shopping for compatible pans/pots, bring a magnet. If it sticks, it is good.
@assassinlexx Havent you seen those TV commercials where they only use half the frying pan? The food cooks, but the other side of the pan is cool to the touch. Induction cookers vibrate food molecules in much the way microwaves do, causing friction and thus heat. Since "induction" infers magnetic, you need a ferromagnetic pan to transmit the vibrations.
Greatdome99 it's not the food molecules that are vibrated, it's the metal in the pan. Induction implies a magnetic field induces local heating in the pan. The food cooks in the hot pan in exactly the same way it would over any other conventional heat source.
@@balajimageshvaran2772 Induction has nothing to do with microwaves. Induction uses a strong magnetic field to induce eddy currents in the ferrous metal. That causes heat.
how much energy was consumed in each case and what is the financial cost? I think this would be the right and right experiment! Imagine a larger gas appliance
Depends on what country you’re in. In Australia gas is way way cheaper as we have one of the highest electricity prices. We have a gas cooktop (for versatility as well with rounded woks and pots), but induction is our next preference way ahead of standard electric.
the heat generated is (almost) directly proportional to the power input, ie about 1800w and 2000w for induction but over a shorter time.given this, induction heating is around 90% efficient, direct heating only about 65%.
Gas cooker to my hypothesis is always gonna be better in using less electricity because it doesn’t rely on it. It’s really only the first few clicks of the lighter that uses electricity (depending on if you have electric lighter) and the rest is gas. Dunno if it uses the same gas or if it cycles constantly.
I have one of those portable induction cookers sitting on top of my electric stove top at home. This is the very reason why it is there. So much faster, so much more efficient. Rarely use the stove top now.
@@robertkat Lmao. Mines on a wood chopping board. It has been burnt a few times because the missus has either accidentally or simply just forgotten to turn my stovetop off too. So you're not alone. 😊
I switched from a gas burner to induction about 2 weeks ago. So far, I have found it to be faster / more powerful than my gas burner if you look at the highest settings, but at the same time more controllable. The thing to get used to the most is the time it takes after turning it off with the pan still in place to cool down. You can usually cook the last minute or so on the remaining heat, which saves energy. Luckily, it has indication for that, so you can use the remaining heat to keep something warm as well. ( No, it’s not instantly cold when you remove the pan, it just doesn’t heat when no metal object is there). So far, it’s a joy for me.
Keep in mind that these were small pots with not much water. The results will be much different if you use a large pasta pot filled with salted water and place these identical pots on full-sized ranges. It gets much worse for the electric (coil or radiant heat) on ranges build after the 2018 UL regulation change which cycles on/off the heating element to avoid grease fires. Gas will be faster for larger containers -- in fact the induction will struggle to bring a large pot to a rolling boil. But for small pots and pans, induction is great if you want precise temperatures when preparing sauces or candies.
@The Grumpy Southerner Bollox. I just paid £25 for a single induction hob off of eBay. It was only intended for use while the kitchen was. It was absolutely brilliant. Long-term, the money spent on an induction hob compared to a plain electric hob will be recouped in no time at all. All of the energy on an induction hob goes directly into the pan. Not only is it fa quicker, there is no wastage. So yes, my statement about it being cheap is doubly correct. Is an example of what is out there: rover.ebay.com/rover/0/0/0?mpre=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ebay.co.uk%2Fulk%2Fitm%2F274020396419
@The Grumpy Southerner Just cheap in general. Think about the other things you've spent $60 on. It just about cost that for 2 people to go to the movies and get a popcorn. And that lasts a couple hours. An induction burner is something you can use every day, for years.
i have used all 3 …. induction is the cheapest to use, fastest, cleanest, most programable and safest (even has temperature sensor to prevent burning pot contents ) gas is the second most cleanest and cheaper than stove plate but the most dangerous (flames and gas leak risk). stove plate is the most expensive to use messiest and reasonably dangerous (hot plate).
phillip coetzer Depend where you live. In the U.K. mains gas is a third the price of electricity, so even though gas cooking is inefficient, the cost remains lower than any other form of electric cooking.
@@spencerwilton5831 My electricity bill is like .13 dollars per kilowatt hour. So running a burner is about 2kw, for an hour cost around .26. If you cook an average of an hour every day for a month, that's less than $8 per month total. Even if there was a stove that made free heat, it's not enough money saved to even bother discussing. You can save more than by turning the thermostat down 1 degree. Or use more efficient methods in general like crock pots or pressure cookers. That said, cooking on induction is better than regular electric stoves in every way. And you don't have to do anything to convert from electric to induction. Though I would prefer gas, I didn't want to tear up my walls.
@@spencerwilton5831 you are right, I just bought an AEG induction cooker from currys PC world last week for £899 which is higher than most of the gas and electric cookers, when am cooking on it I don't remember the amount I spent because it works perfectly.
I had a full electric cooker, i placed water to boil on that and an induction cooker top, even then, the pot boiled at least 2 minutes be the ceramic hob, i loved it when i cooked pasta on the induction, once the water was boiled, i put in the pasta and lowered the power to 4, for the next 12 minutes, it seemed to pulse heat, then when i poured the pasta into the colander, nothing stuck to the pan, i love it so much i have just invested in a full induction hob stove. TY for the upload!! x
Keep in mind that a water boil test doesn't say how effective something will be in the kitchen. Gas can do stuff like cook just the side of the pan, flabe, cook with direct flame, plus the flame contours to the shape and size of the pan. Don't get me wrong induction has a few strong points but gas is more versatile
Induction 125sec with 2000w, or 139sec if supposedly 1800w, like the rest, for better comparability = 42% consumption Electric cooker: 330sec at 1800w = 100% consumption Gas burner: 286sec at 1800w = 86,7% consumption
@@rawthe ((2000Wh/h)*125sec)/(3600sec/h) = 69Wh consumption. Watts is Power, or Wh/h=W... But consumption is measuement of energy-amounts, and the unit for energy is Wh... Another one I noticed: When a hypermodern power-plant uses gas for electricity-generation, efficiency is a bit above 50%. And 42% is nearly half of 86,7% (see my original posting), that means the electricity consumed matches the gas comsumption it´d take to generate that same electricity amount, so, induction not more sustainable than gas in first sight... But don´t forget: to create electricity from gas THAT efficiently, u need a several-billion-Dollars-hyper-modern-power-plant, or else, u´d get garbage-efficiency... And second, electricity doesn´t have to come from gas-power-plants, since it can be generated much more sustainable, with wind mills and photovoltaics...
Depends where. If you've got solar, solar & induction will be cheaper. A fully electric home is also much cheaper than one that has gas appliances. Ie heat pumps are far more efficient than gas (x4) for water & space heating. Even with grid electricity Also daily connection costs for gas can be eliminated.
@@handyman7748 . Not if electricity goes through a RCAC / heat-pump for space heating or a heat pump for water heating. These are around 5 X more efficient than gas. And no need for daily connection charged for gas either.
Good to see the induction was that much faster than the two others. In addition, induction gives much better control of the cooking, because any adjustment is immediate. Induction is also much more power-efficient, truly the only option today.
There are other benefits to gas like being able to hold the pan or pot on the side to brown the sides of a thick cut of meat or to cook hot dogs directly over the flame, keep your hands warm when the heater isn't working, stuff like that.
@Mia L where I'm from, Gas stoves and LPG is widely used, I can even say everyone uses it. No line connection or stuff like that. Everyone buys their tank of gas and plug it up n use 👌
Our Kichten Aid Elite induction cooktop has a power boost setting that would boil that first pot in 30sec flat. It's insane. The main thing you have to understand on induction is it doesn't work well with all pots. Alot of our Teflon had bad bottom surfaces and don't connect well. But once you replace those it's amazing and super safe.
as long as you keep far enough away from it. You have to remember that it is using EMF fields to induce the heat in the cookware. All of that EMF is unshielded and extends outward a certain distance. If you're not standing right over it, it's fine. But over time of standing close to one, not sure the bad effects that might or might not have.
Justin Greene: I KNOW what you meant. I was taking opportunity to say how EMF is real strong on those and using the power boost often may lead to unhealth down the road. Not preaching at anyone ; just bringing up some info for people's knowledge
Induction is producing a very tough magnetic field. I prefer not to use it anymore, however, if you are boiling water or fry - it will do a good job, but doing something in a pot will immediately burn the dish :D. However, I would prefer to stay aside of the 2kW magnetic field.
2:05 for 2000 watts, how about lower settings, like 1000 or lower? I have a portable induction cooktop and I am going to test it with lower temperature. 2000 watts needs a 20 amp breaker.
Exactly as happening when boiling milk, you wait forever but nothing happens just turn your back for a sec.. Congratulations you need to clean the stove now
I have been using induction for a couple of years now, and it's very efficient. Most of my pots have metal grips/handles, and those don't even get warm - as long as the liquid never touches the welding points. I had not noticed the difference in speed, however; to my mind, it is always too slow, anyway lol.
@@dw3403 True, that: I was forced to buy a new set of pots (but I got those cheap, and I got my induction cooker new at an auction, so at a much lower price). At the time, I felt gas was too dangerous - I'm an old guy, and I did forget to turn off the gas in 2 instances - but now, with gas prices being too high, I'm extra happy to have pushed gas out of the kitchen!
That’s what I was thinking 😯😱⚠️🔥 - risk of gas explosion, by not using the knob on the unit - hopefully using the isolation valve on the cylinder connector. But giving us, the viewers, the illusion that the gas was on all the time - why me, and Sylvan Butler are concerned, with his safety and how he has presented this video.
If you are heating liquids such as soup, you can use a dish towel between the pot and the induction cooktop to avoid scratching the glass surface. It's the pot that gets hot, not the cooktop. Turn off the cooktop and remove the pot. The glass surface is just warm and cools off quickly. Don't try this when you are frying anything!
Is there any time limit that u can only use the induction? Coz i wanna purchased induction, im just scared it would overheat if i use it more than 3hrs of cooking
The info about induction vs electric vs gas was informative - thank you. I'll stick with electric because gas is expensive, and induction limits your choice of pots and pans to certain metals. It's not water heating systems - it's single eye cook tops. Please don't mislead viewers by having them think it's a water heater!
You do you, but letting pan selection keep you away from induction is nonsense. There are myriad choices. As long as a magnet will stick to them, they will work. Radiant electric is just awful.
Now we need a comparison of total BTU’s nessasary for a true measure of efficiency. The size of the pans bottom would also potentially capture more of the wasted heat from gas and conventional electric. My perfect kitchen would have gas and induction for a variety of types of pots and pans.
But, please keep in mind the following: a 1800W gas-burner doesn't give 1800W to the pot; let's say some 1200-1400W is realistic, averaged 1300W - the rest is waste heat in form of emissions. Next thing: for 1000W electrical energy it needs 3000W of primary energy in the power station, so 2/3 are waste! For 2000W induction heat it needs 6000W of fuel to generate, for the 1800W 5400W at least - whereas for 1300W of gas heat the burner just needs 1800W - a loss of only 500W, which is less than a third instead of thrice the amount to produce electricity of the same equivalent! Nonetheless the gas hob, even with the slightest power (1300W compared to 2000W induction) to the pot got the second place in this competition!
Induction, air fryer, and microwave defines all the cooking I do. Could not believe the efficiency of the induction cooker when I got it--from someone on eBay who had obviously tried it and apparently used the wrong cookware. Got it for $18 shipped--now I need another and I can't even get close to that deal.
I am so glad that you made this video, I bought the very same induction hot plate that you have about three weeks ago and it came about a week ago, and I could not understand just why exactly it kept showing me an error code. I reread the instructions about four times just to be sure I understood, and I had assumed it was probably the size of the pot I always using, so I tried a bigger pot and it did the same thing, but in this video l, your pot fits right into the middle circle. So now I understand that it works, it's just that you have to get a pot or pan that fits right into one of the circles
Why? Having induction for fifteen years it’s not a question that arises in our house. Cleaning the cooking surface is a joy (in comparison ha), little residual heat to burn little hands, no gummy deposits from burnt gas on kitchen surfaces, responsive turn down like gas, usually time programme to let you walk away
I grew up with Gas stove, moved away from home and only had an electric coil stove top and hated it. Now that I Own my own home I bought an induction stove stop and am very happy with the product. Not to Happy with the Price tag but it's way better than an Electric coil stove top. Think I paid almost 3 grand for the Induction Stove and Oven, but it's 10 years old now and so far no issues. Samsung if you're curious.
Absolutely. Food in induction tastes not good. Gas cooking gives best taste. Induction and hot plate excessively heats the base only that burns food. But heat in gas is eaven.
NOT A FAIR TEST - bc, the induction was heating a dedicated area while the other two had bigger diameter surfaces - to make it more representative you should have used bigger diameter pans. (although the induction would still have been quickest) Also, had you have used ceramic hob - not the older style solid plate (of off the 70's) then there wouldn't have been much difference..
I have an electric house already. I purchased a dual fuel stove for when blackouts occur during a weather event. Efficiency is not the only reason for purchasing.
The classical electric stoves are notorious for their thermostat which doesn't allow enough temperature. All in all though, induction can't be beaten in terms of efficiency.
I went to WC and got back and electric cooker pot hasnt boiled yet. lol wow surprised induction cooker is more efficient than gas cooker. thanks for sharing.
Any suggestions on how to improve heat transfer on the electric hob? The heating element can get up to nearly 600c/1100f! Yes it can, but you need lots of air flow below the unit easy way is to use a slotted surface. Or raise each leg or side. The other thing about ceramic or cast iron is it's heat stability & how evenly heat is spread. Induction is without a doubt the best but it'll only work with ferric/magnetic bottom pans
@@Krishna-of1hv This video is only compared to about 7 minutes, there is no variation in either of the three solutions, but in the long run, induction will be very beneficial in saving money.
Gas cooker for me is cheaper especially when you are just renting a room or place but I opt for the induction cooker this time and I never regret. It saves me time in cooking so it's less electricity consumed. Though gas burner saves me money, I still have to buy the materials for it like the tank and the hose so induction cooker all the way for convenient & time-saving cooking.
Now you should've measured how much gas you used and calculate the cost of boiling the water with gas, qlso how much electricity you used with the induction stove and normal heating element and how much that worked out to boil the water? I'm look to change my stove. Not sure yet which route to go, gas or induction?
I'm a total convert to induction hob cooking. Modern safe and fast. =) Looking at a Tefal 2100 watt model which gets high ratings. Any other recommended?
Gas also is easier to burn food. Setting the temp on induction is more precise and quite rapid. I have used gas, electric, and induction over the years. Gas is also more dangerous, like my neighbor who slightly bumped the knob and filled his house with gas over night - luckily a friend stopped in the morning and nothing 'flamed' it. I could smell strong gas fumes three feet outside his window an hour later, so he was very lucky.
You need to measure the energy used in the three cases to determine which is the most efficient. Also the most appropriate pot for each should be taken into account. Personally I like induction first and a back-up butane in a can stove for back-up when there is a power outage!
That was fun to watch, I gotta start doing some fun stuff on my channel too instead of just service all the time. Good job, You don't talk too much either, nice lol
I actually wondered which was more effecient. I have a horrid infra-red stove burner, and even if you put it on a 1 setting, when it applies the heat, the burner comes on at 100 percent, but for only a little bit of time. But that 100 percent application of heat, makes it real easy to burn your food.
kfl611 Your infrared burned may have a malfunction, I don’t have it at home but my sister have the large one at kitchen with 5 burner, when I used it I learned that the burner functions differently than others, it produces heat intermittently! It goes on and off.. but at lvl 1 it’s 100% ?
Years ago I bought an induction unit similar to this one but couldn't stand the noise it made. This one is noisy but mine was three times as bad. I sent it back. Since then I've read that it could have been the particular stainless steel pot I owned. I had mostly Pyrex cookware at the time, which doesn't work on induction, of course. But watching UA-cam videos about them, induction starts with a low hum, and then some produce an array of high frequency sounds which would really disturb me. The sounds can also depend on what you're cooking. Any water I need boiled fast I can do in the microwave.
Induction does heat up and bring things to a boil very quickly; however, getting a steady simmer is trickier than both gas and electric. It needs to actually be higher than you imagine it to be(the power setting).
Not on mine. I have a double unit on one side I can bring it down to .5 and its a nice slow simmer for a smaller pan. The other side goes down to one which has a nice consistant simmer until i stir it. Then it goes back very quickly.
Well, with an additional 200 watts of heat power... this is not a fair comparison, unless you set the induction to 1800W as well. It looks like you didn't and set it to 2000 at 1:37 in.
Exactly the kind of content I would expect UA-cam to recommend me at 3am
Unfortunately he was found dead
@@wileecoyote5749 chill 😂
Ш
7:25 for summary
You just made a 7:36 minute video approx 3 seconds
Thanks
Though the induction cooker is 2000 watts, it heats very quickly. Cooks more evenly as the whole pan or pot heats up instead of where the heating elements touches the pan or pot. You also have precise cooking temperature that is consistent. Neither gas or electric can offer that. All my cooking at home is only on the induction cooktop. Since using my induction cookers, I have slashed my electric bills considerably. For those who have not yet purchased an induction cooker, make sure that you use magnetic pots or pans. Glass, aluminium, copper or even non-magnetic stainless steel will not work. So when shopping for compatible pans/pots, bring a magnet. If it sticks, it is good.
Have you tried frying eggs?
Fried eggs are good on induction (same taste just faster). Cast iron is good for induction.
Its not really that efficient then cause need to bring a specific tool to cook
Thank you for your comments
_____ most pots and pans these days are already induction ready
great video - no talking, just action.
Thanks, and my wife asked why was I looking at 3 pots of water.
🤣🤣🤣
Lol🤣🤣🤣🤣
Haha
Maybe you were thursty ?
😂🤣🤣😂
Energy consumption?
I think it depends on heat loss the gas and electric are inefficient because of heat loss but the induction is efficient because all heat goes to pot
Hi
No induction work with microwave which easily broke bond between atoms...thats why heat produced which is faster than 2.
@assassinlexx Havent you seen those TV commercials where they only use half the frying pan? The food cooks, but the other side of the pan is cool to the touch. Induction cookers vibrate food molecules in much the way microwaves do, causing friction and thus heat. Since "induction" infers magnetic, you need a ferromagnetic pan to transmit the vibrations.
Greatdome99 it's not the food molecules that are vibrated, it's the metal in the pan. Induction implies a magnetic field induces local heating in the pan. The food cooks in the hot pan in exactly the same way it would over any other conventional heat source.
@@balajimageshvaran2772 Induction has nothing to do with microwaves. Induction uses a strong magnetic field to induce eddy currents in the ferrous metal. That causes heat.
how much energy was consumed in each case and what is the financial cost? I think this would be the right and right experiment! Imagine a larger gas appliance
Induction will always win this. Around 90% of the energy used go into the pot. Neither gas nor conventional electric come even close.
Depends on what country you’re in. In Australia gas is way way cheaper as we have one of the highest electricity prices. We have a gas cooktop (for versatility as well with rounded woks and pots), but induction is our next preference way ahead of standard electric.
@@User-cb4jm
I'm sorry, I can not be clearer, I will not be perceived anyway
it would help if we know the power used by each appliance was included
Induction pretty much always uses less power than an electric cooker
the heat generated is (almost) directly proportional to the power input, ie about 1800w and 2000w for induction but over a shorter time.given this, induction heating is around 90% efficient, direct heating only about 65%.
Gas cooker to my hypothesis is always gonna be better in using less electricity because it doesn’t rely on it. It’s really only the first few clicks of the lighter that uses electricity (depending on if you have electric lighter) and the rest is gas. Dunno if it uses the same gas or if it cycles constantly.
@@ninjireal 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I have one of those portable induction cookers sitting on top of my electric stove top at home. This is the very reason why it is there. So much faster, so much more efficient. Rarely use the stove top now.
Me too! The stove top works as counter space around the induction cooktop, which I use all the time.
I did the same thing, but by accident turned the stove on and melted the bottom of my
induction cooktop.😂
@@robertkat Lmao. Mines on a wood chopping board. It has been burnt a few times because the missus has either accidentally or simply just forgotten to turn my stovetop off too. So you're not alone. 😊
@Annie Northrup My new one goes down to 200w which does simmer. Most only go down to 400w which is too hot for a simmer.
I switched from a gas burner to induction about 2 weeks ago. So far, I have found it to be faster / more powerful than my gas burner if you look at the highest settings, but at the same time more controllable. The thing to get used to the most is the time it takes after turning it off with the pan still in place to cool down. You can usually cook the last minute or so on the remaining heat, which saves energy. Luckily, it has indication for that, so you can use the remaining heat to keep something warm as well. ( No, it’s not instantly cold when you remove the pan, it just doesn’t heat when no metal object is there). So far, it’s a joy for me.
it's a vitroceramic cook top then.
I got caught out at the speed the induction portable cooked when I purchased one. It fast became my favorite appliance
Carolyn Rose I have a stove with the induction top in my home, and I have a portable single induction burner in my RV. I love both of them.
Keep in mind that these were small pots with not much water. The results will be much different if you use a large pasta pot filled with salted water and place these identical pots on full-sized ranges. It gets much worse for the electric (coil or radiant heat) on ranges build after the 2018 UL regulation change which cycles on/off the heating element to avoid grease fires. Gas will be faster for larger containers -- in fact the induction will struggle to bring a large pot to a rolling boil. But for small pots and pans, induction is great if you want precise temperatures when preparing sauces or candies.
Everything is simple and clear without a word, I respect ...
Ya
i came here because i intend to buy induction cooker, i found this very informative video thank you.
You certainly will not regret using an induction hob. Even the little portable ones like the one shown there are fantastic ... and they're cheap too.
@The Grumpy Southerner
Bollox. I just paid £25 for a single induction hob off of eBay. It was only intended for use while the kitchen was. It was absolutely brilliant. Long-term, the money spent on an induction hob compared to a plain electric hob will be recouped in no time at all. All of the energy on an induction hob goes directly into the pan. Not only is it fa quicker, there is no wastage. So yes, my statement about it being cheap is doubly correct.
Is an example of what is out there:
rover.ebay.com/rover/0/0/0?mpre=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ebay.co.uk%2Fulk%2Fitm%2F274020396419
I love my induction cook top. Electric bill down over $40 US per month.
@@othergary What the hell are you cooking? lol
@The Grumpy Southerner Just cheap in general. Think about the other things you've spent $60 on. It just about cost that for 2 people to go to the movies and get a popcorn. And that lasts a couple hours. An induction burner is something you can use every day, for years.
The bigest problem is that these pots for gas and "classic" electric cooker are too small. Big part of energy go to the air ;)
i have used all 3 ….
induction is the cheapest to use, fastest, cleanest, most programable and safest (even has temperature sensor to prevent burning pot contents )
gas is the second most cleanest and cheaper than stove plate but the most dangerous (flames and gas leak risk).
stove plate is the most expensive to use messiest and reasonably dangerous (hot plate).
phillip coetzer Depend where you live. In the U.K. mains gas is a third the price of electricity, so even though gas cooking is inefficient, the cost remains lower than any other form of electric cooking.
@@spencerwilton5831 My electricity bill is like .13 dollars per kilowatt hour. So running a burner is about 2kw, for an hour cost around .26. If you cook an average of an hour every day for a month, that's less than $8 per month total. Even if there was a stove that made free heat, it's not enough money saved to even bother discussing. You can save more than by turning the thermostat down 1 degree. Or use more efficient methods in general like crock pots or pressure cookers.
That said, cooking on induction is better than regular electric stoves in every way. And you don't have to do anything to convert from electric to induction. Though I would prefer gas, I didn't want to tear up my walls.
@@spencerwilton5831 you are right, I just bought an AEG induction cooker from currys PC world last week for £899 which is higher than most of the gas and electric cookers, when am cooking on it I don't remember the amount I spent because it works perfectly.
What is the wattage of the electric cooker?
I had a full electric cooker, i placed water to boil on that and an induction cooker top, even then, the pot boiled at least 2 minutes be the ceramic hob, i loved it when i cooked pasta on the induction, once the water was boiled, i put in the pasta and lowered the power to 4, for the next 12 minutes, it seemed to pulse heat, then when i poured the pasta into the colander, nothing stuck to the pan, i love it so much i have just invested in a full induction hob stove. TY for the upload!! x
Its in the description
Keep in mind that a water boil test doesn't say how effective something will be in the kitchen. Gas can do stuff like cook just the side of the pan, flabe, cook with direct flame, plus the flame contours to the shape and size of the pan. Don't get me wrong induction has a few strong points but gas is more versatile
Gas stove produce emission, induction stove doesnot.
All good points
If you put a cover on the pan, you could gain 50% also.
I was wondering the same thing!
Brilliant!
I think this was done more as a visual, to see which heating method heated quickest. It is kind of hard to view the water boiling with a lid on.
We are one step away from watching together as the paint dries.
Induction 125sec with 2000w, or 139sec if supposedly 1800w, like the rest, for better comparability = 42% consumption
Electric cooker: 330sec at 1800w = 100% consumption
Gas burner: 286sec at 1800w = 86,7% consumption
great comment
does this mean the induction cooker consumed 420 watts?
@@rawthe ((2000Wh/h)*125sec)/(3600sec/h) = 69Wh consumption. Watts is Power, or Wh/h=W... But consumption is measuement of energy-amounts, and the unit for energy is Wh...
Another one I noticed: When a hypermodern power-plant uses gas for electricity-generation, efficiency is a bit above 50%. And 42% is nearly half of 86,7% (see my original posting), that means the electricity consumed matches the gas comsumption it´d take to generate that same electricity amount, so, induction not more sustainable than gas in first sight... But don´t forget: to create electricity from gas THAT efficiently, u need a several-billion-Dollars-hyper-modern-power-plant, or else, u´d get garbage-efficiency... And second, electricity doesn´t have to come from gas-power-plants, since it can be generated much more sustainable, with wind mills and photovoltaics...
How about energy costs ? Which one costs more over time ?
Each device is rated at 1800W so whichever finished the boiling task at the earliest is the most efficient.
Depends where.
If you've got solar, solar & induction will be cheaper.
A fully electric home is also much cheaper than one that has gas appliances.
Ie heat pumps are far more efficient than gas (x4) for water & space heating. Even with grid electricity
Also daily connection costs for gas can be eliminated.
@@guringai you couldnt be more wrong, electric cost way more than gas
@@handyman7748 . Not if electricity goes through a RCAC / heat-pump for space heating or a heat pump for water heating.
These are around 5 X more efficient than gas.
And no need for daily connection charged for gas either.
Varun Verma An 1800 watt gas cooker, eh? Alrighty then.
Good to see the induction was that much faster than the two others. In addition, induction gives much better control of the cooking, because any adjustment is immediate. Induction is also much more power-efficient, truly the only option today.
There are other benefits to gas like being able to hold the pan or pot on the side to brown the sides of a thick cut of meat or to cook hot dogs directly over the flame, keep your hands warm when the heater isn't working, stuff like that.
@Mia L where I'm from, Gas stoves and LPG is widely used, I can even say everyone uses it. No line connection or stuff like that. Everyone buys their tank of gas and plug it up n use 👌
Nope, induction is very bad for the quality of food and water.
No 1 induction
No 2 gas
No 3 electric
Thx for the video 👌
Our Kichten Aid Elite induction cooktop has a power boost setting that would boil that first pot in 30sec flat. It's insane.
The main thing you have to understand on induction is it doesn't work well with all pots. Alot of our Teflon had bad bottom surfaces and don't connect well. But once you replace those it's amazing and super safe.
as long as you keep far enough away from it. You have to remember that it is using EMF fields to induce the heat in the cookware. All of that EMF is unshielded and extends outward a certain distance. If you're not standing right over it, it's fine. But over time of standing close to one, not sure the bad effects that might or might not have.
@@EphemeralProductions Not quite what I mean. The bottoms are so corroded they don't make good contact for induction.
Justin Greene: I KNOW what you meant. I was taking opportunity to say how EMF is real strong on those and using the power boost often may lead to unhealth down the road. Not preaching at anyone ; just bringing up some info for people's knowledge
@@EphemeralProductions The only people who could possibly have issues is people with implants/pacemaker.
I'm surprised. I wonder if the gas ring were smaller with the same output?
Can I use a canner with the induction stove and keep a steady pressure?
Induction is producing a very tough magnetic field. I prefer not to use it anymore, however, if you are boiling water or fry - it will do a good job, but doing something in a pot will immediately burn the dish :D. However, I would prefer to stay aside of the 2kW magnetic field.
That 2kw magnetic field is absorbed by whatever it's cooking. And people ain't magnetic so you can't absorb that energy.
2:05 for 2000 watts, how about lower settings, like 1000 or lower? I have a portable induction cooktop and I am going to test it with lower temperature. 2000 watts needs a 20 amp breaker.
He is using 230v so a 2kW is normal portable
Excellent experiment! Thank you for sharing!
Watching water and waiting for it to boil - prevents it from boiling - known fact :P
Exactly as happening when boiling milk, you wait forever but nothing happens just turn your back for a sec.. Congratulations you need to clean the stove now
hahaha - time flies when you're havin fun (oops - wrong saying)!
Ha Ha ,Which school has taught this ?
@@RD-ij2sz School of the life 😋
But actually it is a known joke-fact. Look for "psychology of time" + "boiling water"
🤣🤣🤣
Can you use non-magnetic pots with electric cooker?
I have been using induction for a couple of years now, and it's very efficient. Most of my pots have metal grips/handles, and those don't even get warm - as long as the liquid never touches the welding points. I had not noticed the difference in speed, however; to my mind, it is always too slow, anyway lol.
Good for stir frying?
What are the drawbacks. compared to gas burner?
Yes but you have to have a pan that a magnet will stick too. It also depends on the wattage you have on the unit.
@@dw3403 True, that: I was forced to buy a new set of pots (but I got those cheap, and I got my induction cooker new at an auction, so at a much lower price). At the time, I felt gas was too dangerous - I'm an old guy, and I did forget to turn off the gas in 2 instances - but now, with gas prices being too high, I'm extra happy to have pushed gas out of the kitchen!
@@33lex55
So glad to hear you are happy with it.
how are you controlling the gas burner?
That’s what I was thinking 😯😱⚠️🔥 - risk of gas explosion, by not using the knob on the unit - hopefully using the isolation valve on the cylinder connector. But giving us, the viewers, the illusion that the gas was on all the time - why me, and Sylvan Butler are concerned, with his safety and how he has presented this video.
مقطع مفيد جدا، شكرا لكم
كنت محتارة بينهم قبل مشاهدة هذا الفيديو
Waow, that is some serious piece of kitchen appliance you have there. Impressive to say the least
If you are heating liquids such as soup, you can use a dish towel between the pot and the induction cooktop to avoid scratching the glass surface. It's the pot that gets hot, not the cooktop. Turn off the cooktop and remove the pot. The glass surface is just warm and cools off quickly. Don't try this when you are frying anything!
is that really an induction stove or only an infrared stove? Was the electric stove seton high temp?
Good explain.. 👍ಈ ವಿಡಿಯೋ ನನ್ನ ಸಂಶೆಯ ನಿವಾರಿಸಿದೆ
Is there any time limit that u can only use the induction? Coz i wanna purchased induction, im just scared it would overheat if i use it more than 3hrs of cooking
could you make one more comparison including infrared cooker?
but which is GOOD FOR MY ELECTRIC BILL, induction or the electric coil
Induction!! I saw one that saves 83% of energy compared to electric! Hope this helps!
Induction definitely.
The info about induction vs electric vs gas was informative - thank you. I'll stick with electric because gas is expensive, and induction limits your choice of pots and pans to certain metals. It's not water heating systems - it's single eye cook tops. Please don't mislead viewers by having them think it's a water heater!
You do you, but letting pan selection keep you away from induction is nonsense. There are myriad choices. As long as a magnet will stick to them, they will work. Radiant electric is just awful.
@@robertfrapples2472 : I shall - thank you!
I have a induction cooktop too. You should be able to get any pot or pan, copper, Pyrex or steel with a iron bottom by now.
Now we need a comparison of total BTU’s nessasary for a true measure of efficiency. The size of the pans bottom would also potentially capture more of the wasted heat from gas and conventional electric. My perfect kitchen would have gas and induction for a variety of types of pots and pans.
Any guide on how to do tht ? 🙏
Ever heard of a LID?
did you measure the amount of water for each pot before putting it on flames?
did you watch the video?
so what are you using to run the gas cooker?
Where is the microwave boiling water too?
But, please keep in mind the following: a 1800W gas-burner doesn't give 1800W to the pot; let's say some 1200-1400W is realistic, averaged 1300W - the rest is waste heat in form of emissions. Next thing: for 1000W electrical energy it needs 3000W of primary energy in the power station, so 2/3 are waste! For 2000W induction heat it needs 6000W of fuel to generate, for the 1800W 5400W at least - whereas for 1300W of gas heat the burner just needs 1800W - a loss of only 500W, which is less than a third instead of thrice the amount to produce electricity of the same equivalent! Nonetheless the gas hob, even with the slightest power (1300W compared to 2000W induction) to the pot got the second place in this competition!
Very interesting comparison! Thank you for sharing! Induction cooking is absolutely awesome :D
Induction, air fryer, and microwave defines all the cooking I do. Could not believe the efficiency of the induction cooker when I got it--from someone on eBay who had obviously tried it and apparently used the wrong cookware. Got it for $18 shipped--now I need another and I can't even get close to that deal.
I am so glad that you made this video, I bought the very same induction hot plate that you have about three weeks ago and it came about a week ago, and I could not understand just why exactly it kept showing me an error code. I reread the instructions about four times just to be sure I understood, and I had assumed it was probably the size of the pot I always using, so I tried a bigger pot and it did the same thing, but in this video l, your pot fits right into the middle circle. So now I understand that it works, it's just that you have to get a pot or pan that fits right into one of the circles
Is your pot magnetic? only cookware with magnetic bottom works with induction.
Why didn't you kept the power same for all three?
How are you turning on the gas? and the video has a 3 second delay between visual and audio 😣 - sounds disturbingly weird
Faulty experiment
What burner is that? The electric one? Electric burners don't cook as even as I like, and butane gets expensive quick...
You slould also compare it with the simple ceramic cooker
Why?
Having induction for fifteen years it’s not a question that arises in our house. Cleaning the cooking surface is a joy (in comparison ha), little residual heat to burn little hands, no gummy deposits from burnt gas on kitchen surfaces, responsive turn down like gas, usually time programme to let you walk away
Good to compare,but why you didn't use also ceramic hob?digital,and not digital..
What about the costs?
very helpful comparison! because we are planning to buy induction cooker. thanks👍
I grew up with Gas stove, moved away from home and only had an electric coil stove top and hated it. Now that I Own my own home I bought an induction stove stop and am very happy with the product. Not to Happy with the Price tag but it's way better than an Electric coil stove top. Think I paid almost 3 grand for the Induction Stove and Oven, but it's 10 years old now and so far no issues. Samsung if you're curious.
Induction cooker is still using some electricity to cook, right?
1 person ke liye konsa sahi hoga gas or induction? Student ke liye.. 2 time khana banane ke liye? Kitna bill aega?
The problem is cheap induction hobs are only good at boiling water and I already have a cheap 2kw electric kettle for that.
it also cook you faster on induction than gas stove
Absolutely. Food in induction tastes not good. Gas cooking gives best taste. Induction and hot plate excessively heats the base only that burns food. But heat in gas is eaven.
NOT A FAIR TEST - bc, the induction was heating a dedicated area while the other two had bigger diameter surfaces - to make it more representative you should have used bigger diameter pans.
(although the induction would still have been quickest) Also, had you have used ceramic hob - not the older style solid plate (of off the 70's) then there wouldn't have been much difference..
I have an electric house already. I purchased a dual fuel stove for when blackouts occur during a weather event. Efficiency is not the only reason for purchasing.
So how much gas was burned, and how much did the gas canister cost?
I'm using the wood. Pleasant sound, smoke smell, cheap. Oh, the people of the city. Artificial life!
uldy muldy 😁
Pellet stove?
Pellets. May be. must also buy them. I like pine cones, dried sticks, dry orange peel
@@uldymuldy I'm burning cow dung, pleasant smell, cheap. Oh the bourgeois existence.
@@RobertSeviour1 suuper!
The classical electric stoves are notorious for their thermostat which doesn't allow enough temperature. All in all though, induction can't be beaten in terms of efficiency.
I went to WC and got back and electric cooker pot hasnt boiled yet. lol wow surprised induction cooker is more efficient than gas cooker. thanks for sharing.
Anyone measure the end coming off one of those induction cookers?
The gas stove on the right is what I am using
is it alright to sit small stainless steel pot Directly on the burner cap to boil water?
is it toxic?
@Dorin Neculai Yes and they won't even work with induction cook tops. So, in order to use them, you'd have to use either gas or regular electric.
Any suggestions on how to improve heat transfer on the electric hob? The heating element can get up to nearly 600c/1100f! Yes it can, but you need lots of air flow below the unit easy way is to use a slotted surface. Or raise each leg or side. The other thing about ceramic or cast iron is it's heat stability & how evenly heat is spread.
Induction is without a doubt the best but it'll only work with ferric/magnetic bottom pans
What could be wrong? Compare the diameter of the bottoms of the pots with the size of the effizient heating plates!!!
Nice video. Which is best in your mind?
Induction.
@@ElectricExperimentsRobert33 wow great¡ what is the power consumption?
@@Krishna-of1hv This video is only compared to about 7 minutes, there is no variation in either of the three solutions, but in the long run, induction will be very beneficial in saving money.
@@ElectricExperimentsRobert33 thank you so much for your kind reply.
Gas. High quality gas cooker and not this common cigarette lighter.
I just want to know which is cheapest to cook
Gas cooker for me is cheaper especially when you are just renting a room or place but I opt for the induction cooker this time and I never regret. It saves me time in cooking so it's less electricity consumed. Though gas burner saves me money, I still have to buy the materials for it like the tank and the hose so induction cooker all the way for convenient & time-saving cooking.
Leslie Lidot do you cook inside your room ?
Now you should've measured how much gas you used and calculate the cost of boiling the water with gas, qlso how much electricity you used with the induction stove and normal heating element and how much that worked out to boil the water?
I'm look to change my stove. Not sure yet which route to go, gas or induction?
I think you are a good husband, because you love kitchen work.
I'm a total convert to induction hob cooking. Modern safe and fast. =)
Looking at a Tefal 2100 watt model which gets high ratings. Any other recommended?
Gas will always be the fastest. Don't compare a high quality induction cooker to a gas lighter.
Marius Greeff in my experience, induction is always fastest. Even my cheap $49 portable induction is faster than my SMEG 900mm cooktop
Gas also is easier to burn food. Setting the temp on induction is more precise and quite rapid. I have used gas, electric, and induction over the years. Gas is also more dangerous, like my neighbor who slightly bumped the knob and filled his house with gas over night - luckily a friend stopped in the morning and nothing 'flamed' it. I could smell strong gas fumes three feet outside his window an hour later, so he was very lucky.
Great comparison. Are all induction cookers that noisy though?
That is a caveat. They BUZZZZZZZZZ
Before watching I'll say the induction cooktop will be the quickest.
They are brilliant
You need to measure the energy used in the three cases to determine which is the most efficient. Also the most appropriate pot for each should be taken into account.
Personally I like induction first and a back-up butane in a can stove for back-up when there is a power outage!
efficiency of induction cooker varies depending on its rating. Better components and control circuits can cut the power usage significantly.
@@howardlam6181 videos or links
Wow, this made me convince to buy an induction cooker.
That was fun to watch, I gotta start doing some fun stuff on my channel too instead of just service all the time. Good job, You don't talk too much either, nice lol
I actually wondered which was more effecient. I have a horrid infra-red stove burner, and even if you put it on a 1 setting, when it applies the heat, the burner comes on at 100 percent, but for only a little bit of time. But that 100 percent application of heat, makes it real easy to burn your food.
kfl611
Your infrared burned may have a malfunction, I don’t have it at home but my sister have the large one at kitchen with 5 burner, when I used it I learned that the burner functions differently than others, it produces heat intermittently! It goes on and off.. but at lvl 1 it’s 100% ?
And how much power (cost) was used??
What was the energy consumed in all three cases?
I mean energy output per second
i want to buy the electric cooker, pls share the link to buy it
Wow! The induction hot plate heated the water up awfully fast! I'm going to buy a hot plate soon.
Interessante, ma quello che va ad induzione come fa a funzionare? ero convinto ci volessero delle pentole apposta!
Ciao, le tre pentole hanno la base ad induzione.
...ma tutte le pentole che sono di ferro funzionano, tranne con la base di rame, di alluminio e di acciaio.
Grazie mille :)
Years ago I bought an induction unit similar to this one but couldn't stand the noise it made. This one is noisy but mine was three times as bad. I sent it back. Since then I've read that it could have been the particular stainless steel pot I owned. I had mostly Pyrex cookware at the time, which doesn't work on induction, of course. But watching UA-cam videos about them, induction starts with a low hum, and then some produce an array of high frequency sounds which would really disturb me. The sounds can also depend on what you're cooking. Any water I need boiled fast I can do in the microwave.
Gas to induction what which one will be fast
What will be infra red cooker then, it will be faster than induction cooker?
a ceramic hob is not as good as induction.
Induction does heat up and bring things to a boil very quickly; however, getting a steady simmer is trickier than both gas and electric. It needs to actually be higher than you imagine it to be(the power setting).
Not on mine. I have a double unit on one side I can bring it down to .5 and its a nice slow simmer for a smaller pan. The other side goes down to one which has a nice consistant simmer until i stir it. Then it goes back very quickly.
ok but how many amp hours did the electrical ones use that is the real test ....
Köszönöm ,ez egy nagyon hasznos video.
Not a scientific experiment, for energy sources are not heated to the same power.
Completely dumb experiment
Well, with an additional 200 watts of heat power... this is not a fair comparison, unless you set the induction to 1800W as well. It looks like you didn't and set it to 2000 at 1:37 in.
Very helpful to understand which one to buy 👍 and whyyy