Re: Oven Spit
Thanks for redirecting me to this thread, very useful.
A few questions spring to mind, how heavy is the contraption? And where do you keep it when it is not in use?
I have very limited space and although I could keep it in the oven when not in use I would probably struggle to house it while I was baking pizza etc.
Also...
How useful is it to move the spit around inside the oven? After you gave me the idea (but before I read your thread) I was thinking of mounting a V shaped bracket to the wall at the back of the dome. This bracket would support one end of the spit. This would make it a relatively static spit
The other end was going to be supported by magic, I hadn't gotten around to thinking about that bit yet.
One option would be to have a the spit going through a door plug with the motor mounted on the door.
How important is it to keep the heat in when spit roasting and how important is it to be able to look in and see how it is doing (how wise is it to stare into that much heat in general). The door plug would serve to hold the motor, stabilise it and keep the heat in but getting the spit in and out and checking the progress of the cooking would be a bit trickier.
I would probably have the spit rotated by a cog rather than a belt which would do away with the need to have the two attached, this would make it easier to move the spit and take it in and out without having to move the motor as well, which can stay attached to the door plug.
Rather than have the spit needing to be poked though a hole in the door plug (which would cause trouble getting the food on and off or require that the whole door/motor/spit/food combination be moved as a whole) I could have a horizontal path cut through the side of the plug so the spit could be easily removed from the door.
I like to draw diagrams so that people who know about these things can tell me why it won't work. I understand that the motor and cog in this diagram will most likely just rotate the door plug but I couldn't draw a worm screw.
The handle would need to be quite long and poke out of the oven by a fair bit so you could hold it and move the door plug right out of the way, the door would probably need some grips either side. The handle would just be an insulated sheath that would rotate around the axis of the spit so you could grab it without friction burns and without the ordinary burns.
By having the F-on-its-back-and-mirrored-shape you could disengage the rotating motion and still have the spit supported in the oven.
There would be a fair amount of weight on the spit and there may need to be a way of reducing friction where it touches the door or wall. There would also be some fun in getting the loaded spit in and out without dragging the tip across the bottom of the oven as it will be heavy at one end.
However all-in-all I think it stands a good chance of working and it would mean that the only think I have to store would be the spit, and the door to the oven if I was making pizza.
Glad to hear any constructive criticism, I can get non-constructive criticism at home.
I know it is jumping ahead of myself as I have yet to buy the bricks but it would be easier to do this now than try a retro fit. Any hints or other advice would be great. E.g. would I have to have some extra support for the bracket at the back, would the weight damage the dome or would it be negligible. that sort of thing would be good to know before I start.
Cheers
Mark
Thanks for redirecting me to this thread, very useful.
A few questions spring to mind, how heavy is the contraption? And where do you keep it when it is not in use?
I have very limited space and although I could keep it in the oven when not in use I would probably struggle to house it while I was baking pizza etc.
Also...
How useful is it to move the spit around inside the oven? After you gave me the idea (but before I read your thread) I was thinking of mounting a V shaped bracket to the wall at the back of the dome. This bracket would support one end of the spit. This would make it a relatively static spit
The other end was going to be supported by magic, I hadn't gotten around to thinking about that bit yet.
One option would be to have a the spit going through a door plug with the motor mounted on the door.
How important is it to keep the heat in when spit roasting and how important is it to be able to look in and see how it is doing (how wise is it to stare into that much heat in general). The door plug would serve to hold the motor, stabilise it and keep the heat in but getting the spit in and out and checking the progress of the cooking would be a bit trickier.
I would probably have the spit rotated by a cog rather than a belt which would do away with the need to have the two attached, this would make it easier to move the spit and take it in and out without having to move the motor as well, which can stay attached to the door plug.
Rather than have the spit needing to be poked though a hole in the door plug (which would cause trouble getting the food on and off or require that the whole door/motor/spit/food combination be moved as a whole) I could have a horizontal path cut through the side of the plug so the spit could be easily removed from the door.
I like to draw diagrams so that people who know about these things can tell me why it won't work. I understand that the motor and cog in this diagram will most likely just rotate the door plug but I couldn't draw a worm screw.
The handle would need to be quite long and poke out of the oven by a fair bit so you could hold it and move the door plug right out of the way, the door would probably need some grips either side. The handle would just be an insulated sheath that would rotate around the axis of the spit so you could grab it without friction burns and without the ordinary burns.
By having the F-on-its-back-and-mirrored-shape you could disengage the rotating motion and still have the spit supported in the oven.
There would be a fair amount of weight on the spit and there may need to be a way of reducing friction where it touches the door or wall. There would also be some fun in getting the loaded spit in and out without dragging the tip across the bottom of the oven as it will be heavy at one end.
However all-in-all I think it stands a good chance of working and it would mean that the only think I have to store would be the spit, and the door to the oven if I was making pizza.
Glad to hear any constructive criticism, I can get non-constructive criticism at home.
I know it is jumping ahead of myself as I have yet to buy the bricks but it would be easier to do this now than try a retro fit. Any hints or other advice would be great. E.g. would I have to have some extra support for the bracket at the back, would the weight damage the dome or would it be negligible. that sort of thing would be good to know before I start.
Cheers
Mark
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