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delosholly's avatar
delosholly
Explorer
Jan 13, 2017

K-cup Coffee without Electricity in our TC

We have a Keurig coffee maker in TC that we love. It is very useful to quickly make hot water when we need it and it makes great coffee. However, it is only useful when we are connected to electricity. So what I did was to cannibalize a broken Keurig machine to make a K-cup coffee maker that uses no electricity.

I was fortunate enough to find a mist making devise at a thrift store for $2. This has a pump in it that pressurized the water reservoir and forced water through a hose with a mist head on it: used to keep you cool on hot days. Anyways, I cut the mist head off the end of the hose so it would fit into the silicon tubing that was used in the Keurig.

Disassembling the Keurig was not that easy, they are made tough. However I managed to get the K-cup holder part off in one piece and used some of the tubing elsewhere in the machine to extend the tubing that lead into the holder. The black hose from the mist maker fit perfectly into the silicon tubing and does not leak.

All you have to do is to heat up water on a gas stove and pour it into the mister's reservoir, screw on the pump, and pump the hot water through the Keurig part. For us, we use two reservoir's worth of hot water to make two large cups of coffee, but we like our coffee weak. Most people will probably only need one reservoir full of hot water for their coffee.

I did a test and it worked perfectly. We are going camping this 3-day weekend and will report if it holds up to being used multiple times in 3 days.



33 Replies

  • Pretty cool MacGyver and to think I left an old Keurig maker in the condo last year when we sold it.
  • RoyB's avatar
    RoyB
    Explorer II
    We camp alot off grid and usually runour 2KW Generator each morning to re-charge our batteries from the on-board PD9260C converter/charger. During the generator run time we make our fresh ground and brew bean coffee for the day using our Cuisinart DGB-600B... Only takes five minutes of generator run time to do this and pours up in a 10-cup thermos carafe...

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    Backup plan is making hot water on the propane stove and grinding fresh coffee beans with our Mr Coffee coffee grinder from our duty low wattage Power Inverter and using a Coleman camping Peculator type Coffee pot. Once made I will pour this up into the Thermos Cafafe for keeping hot for many hours


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    Roy Ken
  • That is a great idea! Funny how resourceful we get for a hot cup of coffee! Enjoy your trip!