Back in Mid-June, I did a post about a Kickstarter campaign I found for a Biolite BaseCamp stove. I took the bait and bought one, knowing I wouldn't get it until late September or early October.
Well, it's here, and so far I'm underwhelmed.
The attraction of the Biolite stove isn't that it's a nice little woodburning stove to cook on - I have at least two of those - the attraction is that it has a thermoelectric generator that will charge things you would charge with a USB charger: 5V at 1A. The stove has a little panel on it with status LEDs that tell you the charge state on its internal 5V 2.2 AH battery, and the intensity of your fire. This is the only picture of it I could find (and didn't think to take my own). (Biolite photo you can see lots of other pictures of it at their place.)
The battery status is on the left (four LEDs) while the fire is a 2 LED fire. My issue is that I've never been able to charge the internal battery and get it to go past the second LED. We've run the thing more than three hours spread over two occasions and have yet to see the internal battery charge. Most of that time, I've run it at fire levels I'd never want to grill on. We've connected the charger to an iPhone and a Kindle and neither one charged. The charger would only turn on briefly, when the battery was at the second LED, then turn back off.
My impression is that it's defective and I've initiated contact with their Customer Support folks, who asked for some more details.
Did any of you guys also get in on this kickstarter? If so, is yours working better than mine? If there's interest, I'll let you know what's up with it.
In the World of the High Tech Redneck, the Graybeard is the old guy who earned his gray by making all the mistakes, and tries to keep the young 'uns from repeating them. Silicon Graybeard is my term for an old hardware engineer; a circuit designer. The focus of this blog is on doing things, from radio to home machine shops and making all kinds of things, along with comments from a retired radio engineer, that run from tech, science or space news to economics; from firearms to world events.
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It was probably shipped with uncharged batteries, and as you've found out, even a melt-down class fire won't charge them.
ReplyDeleteGetting electricity out of JUST heat is not very efficient. That is why solar panels are not all that efficient. You.'d get more efficiency out of turning that heat into steam and spinning a turbine.
ReplyDeleteTo follow up on the story, they've said they're replacing my stove and sent me a prepaid shipper to FedEx mine back.
ReplyDeleteMore details as they come available.