Tumbleweed mitre box for cheap bastards by ej0rge 3d model
Warning. This content is not moderated and could be offensive.
smoke
3dmdb logo
Thingiverse
Tumbleweed mitre box for cheap bastards by ej0rge

Tumbleweed mitre box for cheap bastards by ej0rge

by Thingiverse
Last crawled date: 3 years, 4 months ago
For some reason, I enjoy conserving cooking fuel.
Mostly when i cook outdoors i use a "Cobb Grill" which is a clever, gadgety Australian grill that, depending on how you configure it, is more like a charcoal-fired oven, or just a cooktop. With some accessories, it is really versatile but expensive.
It has a small charcoal basket that sits in a stainless steel bowl that reflects heat pretty well, so you can use minimal fuel to get your food cooked with a little smoke flavor if you add a little bit of wood. The default cooking surface is a slightly domed diffuser sort of affair, similar to a Korean bbq.
Anyway, I digress. The point is, using a whole firestarter to kick off 8 briquettes is pretty wasteful.
newspaper soaked with old cooking oil sorta works but not as well as the "tumbleweed" style bundle of inner pine bark saturated with (pretty sure) beeswax.
I also have the Weber "Smokey Joe" kettle grill that I use when I need the more extreme heat and/or need to feed more people.
With some experiments, I have found that I can kick off a full load of coal for the Smokey Joe with half a tumbleweed, and even the 12-15 briquettes for the larger 'direct grilling' cobb basket with a third of a tumbleweed.
So I threw these miter boxes together in tinkercad. Because why not.
I've only tested the combo half and third printed in PETG. I'm printing the thirds box in a stiffer TPU right now. I wouldn't recommend PLA because it helps to be able to squeeze the box while you cut. I recommend a thin cheap serrated blade, something from the dollar store in stainless steel.
The 30 and 45 degree half boxes are offered just for giggles.

Tags