h a l f b a k e r yactual product may differ from illustration
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Microwaves, they brought an end to the miserable days of
evenly heated food and comparative silence. Some people
prefer to put them in the corner, no idea why, that's clearly
where the kettle goes. Anyhow, it's possible to package the
electric gubbins and the turntable into a triangular form
factor in quite a neat way. So, you know, do it.
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
This is actually such a good idea tht it is [suggested-for-deletion] on
the grounds that it can't possibly considered half-baked ... [+] |
|
|
I couldn't find one that I felt convinced was actually designed to fit in a corner, rather than a repackaged rectangular model. So the idea, and the demand for the units isn't adequate to actually support producing anything actually built to go in a triangular space, which is a great shame. |
|
|
a couple million google image hits |
|
|
What's the advantage here, though? The capacity of
the microwave is naturally a function of its door area
and depth. So for a given door area and capacity, the
optimal size is the cuboid we are so familiar with.
Adding extra metal to make it a triangle shape will
only add unnecessary weight and bulk. |
|
|
What's the advantage here, though? The capacity of
the microwave is naturally a function of its door area
and depth. So for a given door area and capacity, the
optimal size is the cuboid we are so familiar with.
Adding extra metal to make it a triangle shape will
only add unnecessary weight and bulk. |
|
|
Hinge the door just forward of centre, so the tray cantilevers out a bit when you split the unit to put something in. (Your door would be a triangular wedge in this configuration.) |
|
|
If you made the unit circular (instead of using all these approximations we're settling for), then your door could be something like that of a VW Combi /Minibus. It pops forward, then it slides back along the side in a pleasantly circular fashion. |
|
|
Hurry! There's a design award for you in this. |
|
|
Why stop at triangularizing in just one dimension? Your microwave could be form a trirectangular tetrahedron, with a laid back, supercar-style, diagonally opening door. |
|
|
Or you could sell a microwave kit to countersink. |
|
|
Push a button and up comes the tray under the section of counter the microwave hides under. The lid comes up, to, and perhaps rises proportionally higher to create space during loading. |
|
|
In fact the lid could have a built-in kettle this way, thus overcoming the principal objection to cornerising a microwave in the first place. Just don't get recently boiled water all over you while loading the microwave ... |
|
|
... oh dear ... That kills this variant, doesn't it? In any jurisdiction where there are profits to be made from lawsuits there would be people working hard to get injured by their kettle-microwaves. |
|
|
Oops. Another idea (dead because of the legal complications, above): Instead of an element, run piping into the microwave. (I think that would reduce your carbon footprint if you like doing that kind of thing, too.) |
|
| |