b3ta.com qotw
You are not logged in. Login or Signup
Home » Question of the Week » Mums » Post 638425 | Search
This is a question Mums

Mrs Liveinabin tells us: My mum told me to eat my vegetables, or I wouldn't get any pudding. I'm 32 and told her I could do what I like. I ate my vegetables. Tell us about mums.

(, Thu 11 Feb 2010, 13:21)
Pages: Latest, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, ... 1

« Go Back

Fancy a Brew?
My Mum was convinced when making Tea (the drink not the evening meal) at my house that my kettle boiled water hotter than it did at her house because the Tea seemed to stay hotter for longer than when made at her home. As a scientist i'm sure that water boils at 100 degrees C unless it is at altitude. For the record my mum doesn't live on a mountain.
(, Sun 14 Feb 2010, 20:04, 8 replies)
She may be right,
water in a kettle doesn't boil, it cuts of just before.
I might be that hers cuts off a degree or two before yours.
(, Sun 14 Feb 2010, 20:29, closed)
Er, yes it does
Unless your kettle is faulty.
(, Mon 15 Feb 2010, 13:43, closed)
Mine has recently started boiling for longer.
Just long enough for me to question whether or not the thermostat has jammed on, usually.
(, Mon 15 Feb 2010, 22:40, closed)
i know my mum's kettle
takes 5 minutes longer to boil than mine does, which is a pain
(, Sun 14 Feb 2010, 20:37, closed)
lower wattage.
my mum: "What you got a 3000 Watt kettle for? I bet that uses loads of electricity than our 1000 Watt kettle."
me: "but yours takes three times longer"
my mum: "What's that got to do with it?"
(, Sun 14 Feb 2010, 21:33, closed)
She may be right (supplemental):
Water quality could also be a factor. Hard water* has a boiling point a couple of degrees higher**, as well as potentially depositing a thermally-insulating mineral layer over the element over time*** so that the thermostat kicks in before enough heat energy is transferred to the liquid.

* Water with a higher concentration of harmless dissolved minerals [eg. calcium (Ca2+), and magnesium (Mg2+) metal cations, and sometimes other dissolved compounds such as bicarbonates and sulfates]
** whatscookingamerica.net/boilpoint.htm
*** Of course, I'm not implying she'd allow her kettle to become 'furred up'.

Further Reading: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_water
(, Mon 15 Feb 2010, 7:48, closed)

I like the depositing minerals bit, but I'm not so sure about the higher boiling point part. Why does that matter, you don't care about whether the water is boiling, just the temperature.
(, Wed 17 Feb 2010, 0:42, closed)
Those symptoms sound like
you have thicker mugs, or a more porous porcalin in them. Try bringing your mugs to your mums house some day.
Also the aboves are valid.
(, Mon 15 Feb 2010, 9:26, closed)

« Go Back

Pages: Latest, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, ... 1