• 1 Post
  • 333 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 14th, 2023

help-circle






  • Yeah it’s fine. I actually put two staples in, with a little gap between for the air and steam to come out. In a pinch you can leave the staples out but usually the pressure of the popcorn unrolls the bag and the popcorn comes out.

    I’m actually an antenna engineer (radio frequency/microwave engineer) and I’m embarrassed to say I don’t fully understand it. I’ve seen actual metal racks that come with microwave ovens.

    Theoretically what would happen is currents would flow on the surface of the metal to what we call the skin depth. Since the power level is high, those currents would generate heat. If it’s enough heat the metal could melt or even pop. When this happens it can cause a burn mark and mess up the finish of the interior.

    The other effect would be that the microwaves will reflect off of the staple. Reflected waves shouldn’t really do anything except cause the wave to bounce around in the microwave, which they already do. The inside of the oven is metal after all.

    I think they say not to do it because thin metals can melt or burn. Thick metals might reflect the waves away from where you want them so your food doesn’t cook. Otherwise I don’t see the harm but maybe I’m missing something. I design antennas, not microwave ovens, but from experience I haven’t ever had a problem with the staples.



  • It’s called a Presto Powerpop by Orville Redenbocker. I’ve never posted a picture on Lemmy before. If you see it at the bottom of this post, you’ll know I was successful.

    Anyway, there are a couple of concerns. First, it’s plastic so it may not be healthy. Second, you have to buy these little paper cards that fit in the bottom and are only good for a handful of pops before you have to replace them and ultimately buy more. Kind of like a printer with ink cartridges, you’re buying into replacements. Unlike printer cartridges, though, they are not expensive. I just buy in bulk. Third, only the bowl is machine washable, the bottom black part is not, but it doesn’t really need washing anyway.

    If you’re concerned about the plastic, I used to pop in a brown paper bag. Just put about a teaspoon of oil in the bottom, about a quarter of a cup of popcorn and salt. Fold the bag once and put a staple in it. Don’t fold too much, air and steam need to escape. If you leave the staple out, a lot of times the popcorn overflows and comes out all over the microwave. No, a single staple will not destroy the world of you put it in a microwave.

    Ok, let me try the pic:

    It looks like it needs to be in the internet instead of my phone so here’s an Amazon link:

    on Amazon




  • Why would you even think this was unsafe? What’s the concern? Are you talking about returning the unpopped kernels to storage and popping them later or do you mean right away?

    Sometimes I get the time wrong on my microwave and wind up with a lot of unpopped kernels. So when I get to the bottom of the bowl and see how much extra there is, I put them back in. The only problem is you have to watch them carefully. They have a tendency to burn if you don’t stop cooking right when your running out.

    I should probably note that in not popping microwave popcorn, I’m popping regular popcorn in a special bowl in the microwave.



  • I worked with a guy who’s wife had just had a baby and the baby was sick. The guy was very good at his job but was working from home without really asking permission. We have some leeway in this matter but technically he didn’t clear it. His supervisor really had it in for him and was trying very hard to get him fired for falsifying his time card. I don’t know why he didn’t like him, but the supervisor was a real ass. It may have been racist motivation, but I’m not sure.

    I should point out that I had asked this guy to do some work for me that I didn’t have the capability to do and this guy approached it in such a unique way that the customer and some universities were really interested in his work. This is a defense contractor environment where every working hour has to be accounted for. Whenever I asked the guy a question whether via email or telephone, he always responded immediately. It was all computer code so I didn’t see a problem with this.

    When he came into work and told me what was going on I immediately contact the manager on his behalf.

    Well bottom line is that management pretty much dropped the subject and the supervisor was walked out of the facility. Turns out he had been falsifying his own time card the whole time. How’s that for hypocrisy?

    Justice served.