Box
Cookers |
Click on
the pictures to see a larger version. |
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French organization
Bolivia Inti credits three “Ps” for their successes in
spreading solar cookers: passion, perseverance, and positive attitude. In 2005,
they trained around 800 new solar cooks. Over the past six years, Bolivia Inti
has distributed 3,600 cookers in the Andean countries of Bolivia, Chile and
Peru, benefiting 25,000 people in 200 communities. |
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The
"Minimum" Solar Box
Cooker is very simple to build from two cardboard boxes, aluminum
foil, and a plastic bag in place of glass. |
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The full-size cardboard cooker that collapses down to
3" (8 cm) and weighs 6 lbs. (3 kg) |
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Joe Radabaugh's Heaven's Flame 4-reflector cardboard box cookers. |
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A large institutional oven built by Joe Froese in
Eritrea. |
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An oven built of mud-and-dung bricks in Ladakh. |
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Basket cooker woven especially by Eritrean women. |
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A basket cooker at the
Centre for Rural Technology in Nepal. |
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The "SolarChef," a cylindrical cooker manufactured
in the United States. |
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Wide ovens needs less turning. Tall reflectors bounce in more light. |
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A cooker made from a metal tub by Jay
Campbell. |
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A water pasteurizing cooker made from a pit in the ground by
Said Shakerin. |
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A box cooker made from felt cloth. |
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A box cooker made from a basket by Rodrigo
Carpio in Cuenca, Ecuador. |
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"The Villager," a large
oven for institutional cooking. |
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Barbara Kerr's "through-the-wall" oven in Arizona, USA |
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A number of large wooden cookers in Tanzania. |
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The "SunPan"
was specifically designed to be built in any country with local materials
and hand tools, a home-town solar cooker. This solar cooker can be
mass produced. |
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Acid fruits and tomatoes can be
"canned" in the solar oven.
This
box cooker was made by Doug
Edwards. |
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Box cooker construction workshop led by
Al Ligtenberg in Nepal. |
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The
Pil Kaar solar box cooker |
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