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By Matthew Wright, About.com Guide to Auto Repair

Recycle Your Car's Heat For Good Eatin'

Friday June 27, 2008
These days we are all about recycling. We want to reuse everything we can without letting anything worth something drift out into the nothing to harm everything. In other words, people are serious about conservation. Let's talk about conservation of heat. Heat is energy in its rawest form, so why are we letting so much heat go unused? Put aside the fact that we're doing so little to harness the sun's energy, this is an auto repair site and we're talking about hot exhaust.
Your engine creates a lot of heat as it burns fuel. Aside from keeping you warm in the winter, most of this heat goes unused. But heat has so many uses! One of the most rewarding uses is cooking. Why not use the heat from your engine to cook your meals on the way home? This is not a new concept. Outdoorsmen have been heating cans of beans and baking potatoes under the hoods of their cars for decades. There's even a cookbook about under-hood cuisine. But my interest was newly piqued when I read a blog post that recalled an invention from long ago. In a June, 1930 article in Modern Mechanics the idea of properly cooking with your hot exhaust gases was explored. Why couldn't we take the same technology and use it today? As long as we're driving cars that run internal combustion engines we'll have plenty of extra heat. You can use this heat to cook food without adding any strain on the engine or decreasing fuel mileage. It's heat that's already there and is currently being pumped willy-nilly into the air. Think about the benefits. You can cook dinner on the way home from work, saving valuable time in the kitchen that could be spent with your family or playing Halo. In the summer, you'll save lots of electricity that would normally be used to cool your house down from heat generated by indoor cooking. You'd save precious gas on your outdoor grill.
The idea might sound silly right now, but if the right apparatus was put together, you could cheaply and conveniently heat food with your engine's exhaust. Every little bit counts.

Comments

June 27, 2008 at 7:19 am
(1) Jim R says:

As a youngster working in a gas station,we cooked on hot exhaust manifolds quite often.Now after taking on a wife,she finds the idea ridiculous.I guess there’s something to be said for doing things in a traditional way.
However I do agree that the auto engine wastes tremendous amounts of heat and wonder if there are ways to capture the energy present and use it to help propel the vehicle.A simple concept may be steam power to supplement the petrol fueled motor.

June 27, 2008 at 4:10 pm
(2) bob says:

that is so dumb. it does not cost that much just to turn on your stove.

June 27, 2008 at 9:46 pm
(3) Bruce Hayflinger says:

Years ago I believe Popular Mechanics ran an article on this. Here’s a contmeporary website [and I’m sure there are more.
Happy cooking & driving
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~dietinfo/exhaust_manifold_oven.htm

June 28, 2008 at 7:30 pm
(4) Dwayne Harman says:

Ha!

Back in the day, I used to host cookouts under the hoods of the rigs I drove. Nothing like forgetting about that can of beans under the hood! I knew this practice would be encouraged someday.

-Dwayne

July 1, 2008 at 4:12 pm
(5) Smokingfood4real says:

Hello world… Do you think that I could submit to the author my recipe of adding smoke flavoring? I wonder if anyone has thought of this, and what the royalties pay?

July 1, 2008 at 4:21 pm
(6) publicdomain says:

The recipe for adding smoke is easy and doesn’t have to be paid for via royalties. Just insert your meal into the engine compartment of any automobile with over 350K miles, or any big rig with over 1M miles and presto- instant smoke flavoring.

July 1, 2008 at 10:36 pm
(7) Mark says:

I love this idea, thanks!!!

July 8, 2008 at 5:47 pm
(8) Dave says:

I remember this old chestnut came out during the first fuel shock back in 1973. Gas was fifty cents a gallon! People were trading in their Mustangs, G.T.O’s, ‘Cudas, and Chargers for pieces of quality American automotive engineering like the Vega, Pinto, Gremlin.

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