Aussie Enviro
An Australian community for everything from your backyard to beyond the black stump.
🐢
Topics may include Aussie plants and animals, environmental, farming, energy, and climate news and stories (mostly Aus specific), etc.
🐧 Want a news or information source? Try one of these links below!
News
The New Daily
(Life, Sci, Envt)
John Menadue
(Pub Pcy/Climate)
National Indigenous Times
(Envt)
Science
Online Library.Wiley
(Srch Earliest)
Conservation
Australian Conservation Foundation ACF
Biodiversity Council
(Stories)
WWF, World-Wide Fund for Nature
WWF, World-Wide Fund for Nature
(Blogs)
Nature Conservation Council for NSW
Queensland Conservation Council
(Blog)
Environmental Defenders Office
Education Institutions
Australia National University
(News)
University of Queensland
(News)
University of the Sunshine Coast
(News)
University of Technology, Sydney
(News)
Queensland University of Technology
(News)
University of Southern Queensland
(News)
University of Melbourne
(News)
University of Adelaide
(Envt News)
University of Newcastle
(News)
University of New England
(Connect)
University of Western Australia
(News)
University of Western Sydney
(News Centre)
University of Tasmania
(News and Stories)
University of South Australia
(News)
Misc
Takvera (J,Englart)
(Climate Citizen Blog)
Australian Youth Climate Coalition
🐫
Trigger Warning: Community contains mostly bad environmental news (not by choice!). Community may also feature stories about animal agriculture and/or meat. Until tagging is available, please be aware and click accordingly.
🪲
Aussie Zone Rules.
- Golden rule - be nice. If you wouldn’t say it in front of your ~~grandmother~~ favourite tree, don’t post it.
- No bigotry - including racism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, or xenophobia. You are allowed to denigrate invasive plants or animals.
- Be respectful. Everyone should feel welcome here. Except invasive plants or animals.
- No porn. Except photos of plants. Definitely not animals.
- No Ads / Spamming. Except for photos or stories about plants and animals.
- Nothing illegal in Australia. Like invasive plants or animals. Exotic microbes and invasive fungi also not welcome.
- Make post titles descriptive with no swear words. Comments are a free for all using the above rules as a guide. Fuck invasive plants and animals.
🐝
/c/Aussie Environment acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the land, sea and waters, of the area that we live and work on across Australia. We acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture and pay our respects to their Elders past and present.
view the rest of the comments
Induction hobs are amazing. Much faster than gas at boiling water, and an equal response to changing temperature. Lower quality induction jobs and cookware will have hot spots though.
The best thing about induction is the ease of cleaning the top. Will never go back to gas
What we need is a kick arse list of cheapest to most expensive but in an order of quality/price ratio.
I have no idea if this is true, but apparently the IKEA induction cooktops are very good bang for buck and might be made by Bosch. I am thinking of switching everything to electric, especially now that I have solar, so I'll be looking into this claim in the next few weeks.
I have the cheapest ikea one. It's OK, has some flaws.
Definitely usable though.
Would you buy it again? What are the flaws and would someone that has never used induction be bothered by them?
Yes, I would buy it again but only if I could know the value for money was still there. It's like, maybe if you paid $50-$100 more then the feature set of another one would be "worth" it.
We had a fancy Blanco (early adoption) at our previous place versus the cheap IKEA so I can compare in some way.
The IKEA matches it in the cooking department, hot spot isn't too bad (use cast iron a lot), quick etc. Works well.
Things I don't like:
Anything below a '5' is on/off, not progressive. Fair enough. This affects our solar panels when production is low, you can't ease it on so you pay through the grid.
The fan is noisy when it switches on. Sometimes it doesn't know to turn off so you have to get it at wall after a while. This is the most annoying aspect.
The heat sensor is as noisy as hell, can hear it on the other side of house. Just a whine. Turning it off at wall instead of turning it off on machine is the only way (unless fan is going which I let run a while - some times it turns off, sometimes it doesn't).
The 'lock' feature if you go to touch it too early after turning on won't register your finger. You end up touch and holding multiple times.
I was websearching it once and came across a tear down from an electrical engineer. It was above my pay grade but they didn't have nice things to say from a component perspective. I was searching to see what the watts per level were and 5 is the minimum, everything below that is intermittent application of that level of power.
Besides that, all good. Use it all the time. Basically, progressive power, noise, and touch features could be improved but it's not a deal breaker when you have the switch at wall to control some of the noise.
I have an ikea one. Made by WhirlPool. You can find the manufacturer if you go to the support page for the product. I got a mid range ikea hob, and their 365 frying pan. The frying pan has the best Teflon, but the metal is pretty thin, so there is definitely hot spots. Just something to consider