"Wow Guys,
To tell the truth, already it seems this might be adequate to make distilled water to drink. I don't drink that much water a day, although I should. I used to drink much more during long periods of exercise, but I think this might work. You can fill it to 2/3 capacity in the pot. That's quite a bit of water. A gallon of distilled water will last for several days since I don't use it for cooking, only drinking. I saw an 8 quart stainless steel pot at Sears, but I couldn't remove the friggin lid, so I gave up. Sears help is really bad, no one to help. Also a good point is this smaller 6 quart pot keeps the range from getting too hot. Bigger pots make the range get really hot which I don't like. I don't like running the range fan all the time either, cause its very noisy. Even with this small setup, the five gallon plastic bucket I use gets that water pretty warm in the cooling process, so a bigger unit would require a larger cooling bin I guess. I am using about 12 feet of copper 5/8 wrapped around into a nice circle inserted inside the five gallon bucket. I drilled a hole in the side of the bucket at the bottom, which I fed the copper through there to drain into a collector. I sealed the hole with silicone. All seems to work very well so far. All of this costs less then 100 bucks, so its a good start, not that serious. If I do upgrade this hobby distiller in the future, I would like to use stainless steel tubing instead of copper or solid stainless steel pipe. I did not solder, but used copper pressure fittings and its very water tight, no leaks, but its not under pressure either. The 5/8 is plenty large for the capacity of the steam output, so its seems very safe, as long as I monitor it and not let it boil dry. Its a Magefesa Costco 6.3 quart pressure cooker at $48 dollars retail. Since all the ports are part of the handle, I did not fool with those, but instead drilled a 5/8 hole into the center of the lid, and threaded the double male fitting into that. Once tighten up with the nuts and sleeves, it seems to be very good tight fit, no problems. I do not lose anything through the ports in the handle because its not under pressure. I could take a snapshot with my camera if you want to see it, but its just a first run water distiller that was cheap in cost to make, and it was fun to do it. Next time I could go larger, but I have to remember my range will get hot, even with the fan blower on. For something much bigger, you really need a dedicated propane burner in an outside area like a patio where it can vent in the open air. Something maybe of commercial grade like restaurants use. I think this project is about as big as it gets for the kitchen, although 8 quarts might of worked out ok. Anything bigger should in my opinion, be outdoors or a large shed away from any possible accidents and fire dangers. However, this little project is runly very well on the range, its not too hot, although the range is a little hot, not bad. The burner I use in propane is the perfect size for this size pot. My range has 4 different size burners on it, and this burner is the smaller one. That means it boils the water well enough, but on full it doesn't overpower the pot.
riposa"