learnings, nerdisms, bicycles
I love peanut butter. I also hate mixing it. There are many products available to mix peanut butter for you, but I wanted my own design that took no effort to use. I'm looking for a "set it and forget it" solution. For those who don't know what I'm talking about, many natural peanut butters are not homogeneous at all times. The oil and the nutty material separate, and thus require mixing to return it to buttery consistency.
Here's how I made my own.
My very own peanut butter spinner device.First off, why do this? Mixing peanut butter is obnoxious. Further, I am loyal to Adam's Peanut Butter. Adam's is good flavor and simple ingredients. I wish they sold absolutely enormous jars or buckets of it. Alas, the biggest I can find are the plastic container versions from Costco, shown below in the video below.
SPONSOR ME ADAMS I NEED MORE PEANUT BUTTER!
I wanted a solution that doesn't require anything other than placing the jar on something and hitting a go button. In this case, it ended up being a switch. The rotary switch has a fully off mode, and otherwise is an adjustable potentiometer. I source 5V power from a USB adapter mean to snap into cigarette lighter holes in vehicles. USB power => motor control board => motor. The motor is itty bitty, and has a nice little gearbox for some extra torque. Here's a zoom in:
The internals of the mixer on an older model.Here's the BOM:
unused
tag. I may upload it to printables one day.This won't work man. Have you SEEN the inside of a concrete mixer? - Jerk, low faith friend
Well I got news for you friend, it works well enough! Although I cannot say that it works perfectly, after ~20 minutes of care free rotation, minimally, there is not a layer of oil when the jar is upright and stationary. The oil is perhaps not perfectly distributed into the center of the jar. However, enough mixing has ocurred around the outer radius such that a quick manual mix on first open is much more easily doable with a knife. Perfect? Nah. Good enough? Absolutely!