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| Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables. |
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Well if your gonna do an entire hog then you will need something
a little more powerful than the average grill rotisserie motor that you buy at the outlet house. Trouble is it's gonna be a little hard to find anything in between for sale that's strong enough and yet not overkill on power and price. Try calling some electric motor shops local and ask if they have anything that will run at low rpm for very long without overheating. Tell them exactly what you have in mind. Actually any used washer or dryer motor would do it but you'd have to use a "huge" pulley to gear it down enough to turn slow. A friend of mine once ran a sugar cane mill with one of these by running it thru a series of pulley step downs. Good luck with it. |
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I've hear that a motor from a grocery store check out conveyer is
PERFECT. Strong, small and geared well. Walt On Thu, 19 Feb 2004 20:42:20 -0500, "D" NoMail@NoSpam wrote: Well if your gonna do an entire hog then you will need something a little more powerful than the average grill rotisserie motor that you buy at the outlet house. Trouble is it's gonna be a little hard to find anything in between for sale that's strong enough and yet not overkill on power and price. Try calling some electric motor shops local and ask if they have anything that will run at low rpm for very long without overheating. Tell them exactly what you have in mind. Actually any used washer or dryer motor would do it but you'd have to use a "huge" pulley to gear it down enough to turn slow. A friend of mine once ran a sugar cane mill with one of these by running it thru a series of pulley step downs. Good luck with it. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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"D" NoMail@NoSpam wrote in message ... Well if your gonna do an entire hog then you will need something a little more powerful than the average grill rotisserie motor that you buy at the outlet house. Trouble is it's gonna be a little hard to find anything in between for sale that's strong enough and yet not overkill on power and price. Try calling some electric motor shops local and ask if they have anything that will run at low rpm for very long without overheating. Tell them exactly what you have in mind. Actually any used washer or dryer motor would do it but you'd have to use a "huge" pulley to gear it down enough to turn slow. A friend of mine once ran a sugar cane mill with one of these by running it thru a series of pulley step downs. Good luck with it. www.emotorstore.com |
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Walt Lewis wrote in message . ..
I've hear that a motor from a grocery store check out conveyer is PERFECT. Strong, small and geared well. Walt On Thu, 19 Feb 2004 20:42:20 -0500, "D" NoMail@NoSpam wrote: Well if your gonna do an entire hog then you will need something a little more powerful than the average grill rotisserie motor that you buy at the outlet house. Trouble is it's gonna be a little hard to find anything in between for sale that's strong enough and yet not overkill on power and price. Try calling some electric motor shops local and ask if they have anything that will run at low rpm for very long without overheating. Tell them exactly what you have in mind. Actually any used washer or dryer motor would do it but you'd have to use a "huge" pulley to gear it down enough to turn slow. A friend of mine once ran a sugar cane mill with one of these by running it thru a series of pulley step downs. Good luck with it. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- First of all decide on RPM-have observed several different roaster spits for RPM and most range from 1 to 5 RPM. Also most are chain driven-belts don't like heat but will work if you can keep the belt far enough away from the heat. Next you have to figure out what size critter you will roast. Most people roast "hogs" in the 80-100# range-Germans say it has got to be under 80# to be called Spahnferkle. Don't think you want to roast 500# hogs. I would think a gear motor that can be reduced in speed to the 1-5 RPM area with at least 150" pounds of torque would do the job. There is a place called Surplus Center in Lincoln NB, www.surpluscenter.com and they have lots of used and new gearmotors for sale. Got a 30 rpm 135" pound gearmotor for a coffee roaster from them for about $40 and it works great. They no longer feature this gearmotor in their catalog but may have a few in stock. It would be great caused reduced down to 5 rpm or less would have plenty of torque-assuming you have decent bearings on the shaft. They also have pillow blocks. What do you plan to make your roaster from-some local farmers make them out of 250 gallon oval heating oil tanks - hang a firebox on one end and it is a smoker-roaster. |
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