How Does A Traditional Home Coffee Maker Work

How Does A Traditional Home Coffee Maker Work

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We all get up in the morning and depend on our old friend to start our day - the coffee maker. The only real effort we've got to put in when wanting to enjoy a mug of coffee is so as to add a scoop of coffee, add the specified amount of water and turn the machine on. We stand back and expect our coffee to get ready before we can enjoy it. Give it some thought, perhaps you have stood there and tried to understand how the water gets through the compartment to the top of the machine? Have you ever questioned what that gurgling sound was? Here's what goes on inside.

If you open the top part of the coffee machine, you will discover the bucket that holds the water whenever you pour it in before the cycle begins. If you look inside, you can see a hole inside the bucket's bottom, and this will become obvious to you very shortly. You also see a tube, and the purpose of this tube is to carry the water to the area where it drips out. The drip area would be the part you observe from the top that consists of all the tiny holes. This is where the water arrives through the tube and then simply drips through the tiny holes.

If you turn the bucket upside down, you will see another tube and this is known as the hot-water tube. This tube (tube2) connects into the black tube (tube1) which you see when looking at it from the top. Remember the outlet in the underside of the bucket mentioned earlier? Well, this is where tube2 picks up the cold water - from that opening. Also noticeable inside are the power cord and the on and off switch for the machine.

After that is a heating element. This little part is what makes the water hot. The heating element is simply a simple coiled wire. This is similar to filament inside your standard light bulb or the element within your every morning toaster. The coil inside the coffee maker is held firmly in plaster, and this makes it rugged. This element has two jobs.

* The heating element (or the coil) boils the water when it's put inside the coffee maker.
* The element makes sure the coffee stays warm when the cycle is complete.

The heating element inside the coffee machine is pressed tightly against the warming plate. A heat conducting grease ensures that heat is transferred competently to the warming plate. The conducting grease is messy and is extremely difficult to get off your hands. This grease is found in power supplies, amplifiers - mainly anything that squanders heat.

There's a part that's not visible inside a coffee maker and this is the one-way valve. This valve can either be in that hole which was talked about earlier or it could be in the heating pipe, and this pipe is aluminum. If a coffee maker had no one-way valve, the hot water would just run back into the bucket after trying to make its way up the tube.

So now that you comprehend the fundamentals behind how a coffee maker works, take this information and utilize it to get the best coffee maker for your brewing needs.


About the Author:
Dazed and confused about what brand or type of coffee maker to buy? Before you buy some junk, visit the new best coffee makers available website to see top 3 coffee maker ratings for drip coffee makers, pod coffee makers and
espresso coffee makers based on independent testing results and consumer feedback surveys.



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