h a l f b a k e r y"Put it on a plate, son. You'll enjoy it more."
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I like the idea of this being an inherent property of the mug, but as you note the difficulties may be multiple. I suggest a battery powered heat sensor, that goes beep! when beverage temperature is nearing personally set low enjoyment threshold. Croissant just for the name too though. |
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If you drink as much tea as I do - upwards of 10 cups a day - you begin to develop a "tea sense". I instinctively know, without even thinking about it, how much tea is in my cup, and also the approximate temperature. As this operates on a subconscious level I'm not sure how sophisticated it is, but I suspect that it also does some rough calculation about the rate of cooling as related to the volume remaining (obviously it cools more quickly the less liquid there is left), and lets me know that as I approach the bottom of the cup I need to step it up a bit, whereas when it's full I can leave it standing for a while. |
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I think it's this part of my subconscious that's also responsible for sending me off to the kettle every 20 minutes. |
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...and the toilet every 15 minutes. |
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Trust me sild isn't the only one who drinks that much tea. And yes I do go to the toilet every 15 minutes (roughly) |
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If you used a Seebeck array (thermocouples) around the mug to extract power when the mug was hot, which you then stored in a rechargeable battery or SuperCap, this could then power a CMOS thermometer which monitors the temeprature and beeps when the setpoint is reached. The setpoint is stored in Flash so it's retained between powerdowns. The whole system is heat powered by the beverage itself. |
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Not very dishwasher proof, but since I never wash my coffee mug anyway I don't percieve this to be an issue. |
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[bliss]: You'd be surprised just how much can be accomplished while sitting on the can. We all know, on the other hand, how little else is done when on the Halfbakery. |
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[8th of 7] that is a beautifully hyper-technical alternative to the idea which retains a sense of self-containment. I wish we could donate for notes too. |
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Part of the reason I came up with this idea was because I like the sound metal makes when it contracts, so I am not keen on all these bleepy warnings at all. |
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Use a coiled bi-metallic spring between the walls of a thermos cup. As the drink cools, the tip of the spring can move past little pegs like on a music-box cylinder, "pinging" off each one. |
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Oh yes, now that's good. Bimetallic strips are cheap, and a well understood technology. If you had one "master" strip that released the others, the mug could play a tinkly tune when it reached the optimum drinking temeprature, and as this is sealed inside a double wall it's dishwasher proof. Excellent. [lurch], you should post this as a seperate idea. |
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