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LoLHow would a battery maintain our mechanical syncronous cooker clock?![]()

LoLHow would a battery maintain our mechanical syncronous cooker clock?![]()


Well, for a start, I can think of plenty of other items of domestic electric equipment which would pose at least as great a danger if they 'restarted after a power cut without people knowing', but which don't have such 'NVR' functionality. In any event, even if things (like cookers) do have such functionality, there's no reason why it has to stop the clock 'being maintained'.
The problem is not in having to, say, press a 'reset' button (which would be trivial), it's that the clock loses its memory of the time. When main-powered equipment has a clock, one generally expects there to be some (batter or capacitor) 'backup', so that it does not 'forget' the time if it loses mains power.
I'm not so sure about that. I think that many people (including myself) would probably find it very irritating (and potentially confusing) to have a clock displaying the incorrect time.
It wouldn't be so bad if, after being "re-started it at 00:00" it continued to display that time for ever, but once it 'starts ticking' it will display an actual time which, on occasions, might be close enough to actual time to be potentially confusion.
For that reason, I suspect that many people would 'feel compelled' to reset the clock to the correct time, and that that would represent a lot more than a 'trivial deterrent' to turning the equipment off completely
For that reason, I suspect that many people would 'feel compelled' to reset the clock to the correct time

That is actually better than a smart meter, as it can go around the consumer unit tails, so show what is being used. The smart meter shows zero most of the time, as house supplied from solar or battery.I don't have a smart meter, so I hooked up a Shelly EM clamp on the meter tails and it records electric used and shows live usage. It's good to see how power usage changes over the course of the day, plus switching things on and off and watching the change in power.
Near impossible, when I got off-peak, I looked at starting things using plug in timers, but their safety feature will not let them start when power returns.And even if a delayed start is wanted, how hard would it be to use a timer to say "start in X hours" compared with "start at Y o-clock"?
That's surprising, if it's true (can't believe everything said on TV!) but my microwave has no clock, just one knob for power and one for a mechanical timer. I've had several microwaves with a clock and various automatic controls and the electonics have failed after a fairly short time. Nowadays I go simple, and cheaper.There was a piece on TV, this morning, which suggested that the on all the time clock display, of a microwave oven, actually costs more per day, to run, than actual cooking in the oven. Our microwave, tends to get perhaps 4 minutes per day of use, on full power.
Is that so? I thought it was the water which does it, as unlike suger and fat, it has a polar molecule. But I haven't done any tests.sugars and fats attracts energy far more than water in a microwave
I think you're overlooking 'human nature'/ 'psychology'. If one is constantly exposed to something which is 'displaying time', there is an almost unavoidable expectation that the time it's displaying is at least roughly correct.Only for as long as you choose to regard it as a clock which is going to tell you the actual time.
As above, the 'almost unavoidable expectation' is that what is staring one in the face is displaying a time which is 'at least roughly correct'.A compulsion which can never truly be satisfied anyway, if you have more than 1 oven, etc, as how do you start the clocks on multiple appliances running at exactly the same time? The HH:MM might agree for most of the time, but they'll not change in sync. ... I guess you could move from one appliance to the next, using the time on your phone to set each one at a precise minute. But really? And then what do you do if you're listening to a DAB radio in the kitchen and your appliance clocks don't match the time signal?
Many moons ago I had a secretary who was a very orthodox Jew, who was not allowed (amongst many other things) to touch electrical switches etc on the Sabbath. However, h!Obviously timers are useful - cook at this temperature for this time, or even slightly more complex, e.g. A° for X minutes, then B° for Y minutes, and so on, but how common is it for people to use delayed start for ovens, microwaves, etc?
It obviously couldn't (without a large battery and inverter) - but any remotely modern (let alone new-fangled) appliance would not have such a clock.How would a battery maintain our mechanical syncronous cooker clock?

I think you're overlooking 'human nature'/ 'psychology'. If one is constantly exposed to something which is 'displaying time', there is an almost unavoidable expectation that the time it's displaying is at least roughly correct.

She was pretty offended when I suggested to her that this was "cheating"
However, in general I would agree with you - in most cases, cookers do not need to know the time. Many other things (like fridges!) certainly don't need to, but many new-fanged appliances seem to insist on trying to tell one what the time is![]()
As you say, it's polar molecules that will be heated by microwaves. Water is by far the most common highly polar molecule and I think that many of the others in that league are 'inorganic' (things like hydrogen sulphide, hydrogen fluoride, ammonia etc.). However, I believe that many other molecules (including 'organic' ones) are to at least some extent polar. Sugars and fats have been mentioned. I certainly seem to recall that some sugars are pretty polar (because of large numbers of OH groups), but I don't know about fats.Is that so? I thought it was the water which does it, as unlike suger and fat, it has a polar molecule. But I haven't done any tests.
I'm far from convinced that I could, and I think the same may well be true of many othersYou'd be surprised how quickly and easily one can let go of that expectation.
Same here, but that's not the point. I don't look at cookers or any other appliances to find out what the time is, but nevertheless do find it very irritating to be confronted by a display of wildly incorrect time.If I want to know the time I will nearly always refer to the device I carry with me. I keep it strapped to my left wrist so that it is accessible pretty much instantaneously.
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