Cement mixer as coating pan?

Carlos Eichenberger
@carlos-eichenberger
03/10/10 09:35:47
158 posts
I came across this cement mixer and thought it would make a decent coating pan. It's a fraction of the price of any other coating pans, is freestanding and looks easy to disassemble. Opinions?

updated by @carlos-eichenberger: 06/07/23 00:45:11
Clay Gordon
@clay
03/10/10 10:05:03
1,680 posts
It all depends on what the interior surface looks like and is made of. I am fairly confident that whatever it is made from it's not certified as food grade. At a minimum it will need extensive cleaning/degreasing.I know you are handy with tools and such, so rigging a small motor to a gearwheel should not be difficult for you. As that's the case I would look into a used Hobart mixing bowl. I just found a 60qt on eBay for $25. Weld a shaft to the bottom of the bowl. Make a simple metal frame (90 degree stamped metal with bolt holes would be easier and cheaper than welding) and use bolt on casters. Here are two photos of something I saw in Ecuador. This one is being used as a cocoa bean roaster - note the burner underneath in the second photo (which also shows the casters being used). You could even adapt this for use as a ball mill.




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Kerry
@kerry
03/10/10 21:01:16
288 posts
Didn't Heston Blumenthol do something with an electric drill and a paint can?I'd be questioning the food grade surface. No reason though that you couldn't take the 'bowl' off the cement mixer and replace it with some sort of jury rigged stainless steel bowl.


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Carlos Eichenberger
@carlos-eichenberger
03/11/10 12:12:29
158 posts
Clay,I was actually thinking of disassembling the drum, thoroughly degreasing it with isopropyl alcohol, bead blasting and then having it plated with either nickel or chrome. Failing that, I think I could get a duplicate drum fabricated from stainless steel, and even so I'd probably come in way below the price of a dedicated coating pan.
Clay Gordon
@clay
03/11/10 13:07:45
1,680 posts
As I pointed out, large Hobart mixer bowls can be had for cheap and they are S/S and might even be NSF-approved.It's a toss-up as to which approach involves more work - and more expense. Eventually, however, the plating might wear through I would think so going that route might mean more costly maintenance in the long run.Either way, you should easily be able to do it for less than the cost of a (new) pan.


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clay - http://www.thechocolatelife.com/clay/
Ruth Atkinson Kendrick
@ruth-atkinson-kendrick
03/11/10 14:53:21
194 posts
Having spent 40 years in the plating business, you can't plate chrome inside a container. The chrome throws to the outside of things. Nickel has better throw, but it would cost you BIG bucks to have something like that plated.
Carlos Eichenberger
@carlos-eichenberger
03/11/10 15:22:25
158 posts
Thanks for the insight Clay, with an amalgam of your suggestions and my ideas I think I can come up with a food-safe and cheap solution.

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