2014-06-22 (Su) Sous Vide Oven COMPLETED



A six inch piece of two-conductor cord was cut, stripped, and tinned. Small gauge wire was used which was approximately 26AWG. Small pieces of shrink tubing were placed over two of the tinned ends. Those ends were soldered to the terminals of a 3.5mm phono socket. The shrink tubing was heated and snugged down onto the phono terminals and wires. The tinned ends with no shrink tubing were inserted into the NTC screw terminals of the temperature controller. No concern was given to polarity. The 3.5mm socket was glued in place with hot glue. The wires of the temperature controller were divided so the low-voltage DC wires of the thermometer did not mix with the 120VAC wires.

 Short wire with tinned ends and 3.5mm socket

 Heat shrink on 3.5mm terminals

Shrinking heat tube on a 3.5mm socket

Attaching the 3.5mm socket to the NTC terminals of the controller

3.5mm socket glued in place
The high voltage wires are separated from the low voltage wires

The wire lead ends of the temperature probe were stripped, tinned, and soldered to the terminals of a 3.5mm jack. Shrink tubing was used on each wire. The crimp supports on the jack were tightened onto the wires then the jack was sealed up. The temperature sensor construction was complete.

 Shrink tube on a 3.5mm jack

Crimped 3.5mm jack

Completed temperature probe

Testing showed that the controller would display a higher temperature than read by any other thermometer. This is hazardous since water controlled by this would be cooler than necessary and may not cook food thoroughly since it would not reach a safe temperature. This was tested by a digital IR thermometer and a kitchen dial thermometer. At higher temperatures the discrepancy between the IR, dial, and controller widened due to the logarithmic change of resistance.

A digital thermometer disagrees with the controller

 A dial thermometer disagrees with the controller

At higher temperatures the controller still reads low

At even higher temperatures the discrepancy increases

The function of the temperature controller was tested by reaching a set point, 130ºFahrenheit, then adding ice to cool the water. The purpose was to see how finicky the controller was. The result was that the controller would not reapply heat until the temperature dropped more than two degrees below the set point. This is good because it means the controller will not cause the relay to chatter excessively.

Testing the controller's operation by cooling the water

To test against a known successful recipe using this controller two eggs were put in while the controller reported it was at 167º Fahrenheit. The first egg was cooked for fifteen minutes according to the chart from Sous Vide Supreme. An egg timer was also put into the oven which displays the doneness of eggs by changing color as heat permeates the timer and eggs. After fifteen minutes one egg was removed and the egg timer displayed it had reached the soft doneness point. The egg white was liquid and lumpy but the yolk was the correct consistency and flavor.

Egg timers and 167ºFahrenheit water

Eggs were put in and the temperature dropped

The egg timer shows soft cooked eggs

One egg cooked at 167ºFahrenheit for fifteen minutes

Liquid and lumpy egg white

Well cooked yolk

The second egg was removed after 23 minutes when the egg timer showed it to be fully heated. In this egg the white was still liquid and lumpy but the yolk had partially hardened. These symptoms suggest that the water was not sufficiently heated. To fix this problem two solutions were apparent at first. The first option is to make a chart showing the desired water temperature and the temperature to set on the controller. The second option is to insert a potentiometer or rheostat to change the temperature reading so that a calibration is possible.

 The eggs timer shows a fully cooked egg

One egg cooked at 167ºFahrenheit for 23 minutes
Video of opening a cooked egg

To test the properties of the NTC an ohmmeter was attached while the temperature was changed. Since the resistance falls as the temperature rises it will be necessary to increase the resistance of the probe. This should be able to be accomplished by putting a variable resistor in series with the probe.

If people reproduced this project and did not encounter a discrepancy with the thermometer they would be done with the build.

To do:
  •  Insert calibration resistor. ≤1KΩ
  • Draft controller template for cut-out
  • Sketch circuit with optional calibrating potentiometer
  • Retest
  • Document
 Journal page 1

Journal page 2
Journal page 3

Journal page 4

The rest of the posts for this project have been arranged by date.

A list showing of all the final posts of COMPLETED projects.


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