K
kylechandler1300
New member
So has anyone successfully cooked food in a muffpot on their snowbike? If so any pics of mounting locations/info? I've found older threads but most of them said it never got hot enough.
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I have been successfully with my Husaberg, last winter I was able to melt cheese and toast the outsides of a sandwich. This has been big quest and I have tried it all.
Basically I mount the standard muff pot on the exhaust right after the turn coming out of the head, that itself is not enough. I made a insulated cover out of high heat fabrics and insulation which
1) keeps the snow off the muff pot
2) holds in the heat
Today I got in some different high temp fabric that looks to have promise in durability and flexibility so the plan is to get a few samples made and get them on some different bikes.
I'm looking for some avid riders that already own a muff pot and are willing to help with r&d, I would supply the cover. If anyone thinks this is for them let me know, what and where you ride and if your at it most every day or weekend
warriors.
This is one of the very many prototypes
https://www.snowest.com/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=288060&stc=1&d=1510711177
I have been successfully with my Husaberg, last winter I was able to melt cheese and toast the outsides of a sandwich. This has been big quest and I have tried it all.
Basically I mount the standard muff pot on the exhaust right after the turn coming out of the head, that itself is not enough. I made a insulated cover out of high heat fabrics and insulation which
1) keeps the snow off the muff pot
2) holds in the heat
Today I got in some different high temp fabric that looks to have promise in durability and flexibility so the plan is to get a few samples made and get them on some different bikes.
I'm looking for some avid riders that already own a muff pot and are willing to help with r&d, I would supply the cover. If anyone thinks this is for them let me know, what and where you ride and if your at it most every day or weekend
warriors.
This is one of the very many prototypes
https://www.snowest.com/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=288060&stc=1&d=1510711177
Looks like a great idea. I'd test one for you. But this is my first year with a snowbike so Im probably not the best one to test it...
I know this post is quite old, but hopefully you see this. Wondering about your progress? I just contacted Muffpot to ask them about this. I can't believe that this won't worka and that no one has put it out there! I snowmobile in NH and have tried closing off vents to the engine, which I don't really want to do, packed it with extra tinfoil, and tried using a welding glove. An insulating, fire resistant cover is the perfect idea!I have been successfully with my Husaberg, last winter I was able to melt cheese and toast the outsides of a sandwich. This has been big quest and I have tried it all.
Basically I mount the standard muff pot on the exhaust right after the turn coming out of the head, that itself is not enough. I made a insulated cover out of high heat fabrics and insulation which
1) keeps the snow off the muff pot
2) holds in the heat
Today I got in some different high temp fabric that looks to have promise in durability and flexibility so the plan is to get a few samples made and get them on some different bikes.
I'm looking for some avid riders that already own a muff pot and are willing to help with r&d, I would supply the cover. If anyone thinks this is for them let me know, what and where you ride and if your at it most every day or weekend
warriors.
This is one of the very many prototypes
https://www.snowest.com/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=288060&stc=1&d=1510711177
I know this post is quite old, but hopefully you see this. Wondering about your progress? I just contacted Muffpot to ask them about this. I can't believe that this won't worka and that no one has put it out there! I snowmobile in NH and have tried closing off vents to the engine, which I don't really want to do, packed it with extra tinfoil, and tried using a welding glove. An insulating, fire resistant cover is the perfect idea!
Hope you see this and respond.