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Espresso Express

On transporting coffee by bike

By Umbra Fisk
17 Mar 2008
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question Dear Umbra,

Now that there are promises that the snow will melt someday, I'm dreaming about biking again -- to work, to the farmers' market, to church, etc. However, my sweet husband loves to make me coffee and send it with me when I leave the house. I have wonderful reusable coffee cups for the car, but how do I transport coffee on a bicycle without ruining it or me? Any bright ideas?

Caffeine Appreciator
Duluth, Minn.

answer Dearest CA,

"Thermos thermos thermos, you keep things hot all day, thermos thermos thermos, you're leak proof and lightweigh ... t." My bright idea is a thermos. I have had this bright idea before, but as far as I am concerned a thermos never loses its luster as an idea. Perhaps it will seem newer if I say, "The Dewar flask is for you."

There's got to be a better way.
Photo: Carey via Flickr
The Scotsman scientist James Dewar (born in Kincardine-on-Forth, Scottish enough for anyone) invented the vacuum flask in 1892 to help him with his physics experiments. Apparently he needed to keep liquid gases cold, and keep them cold he did. (He has no apparent connection to the Dewar's Scotch people, though they no doubt appreciated his invention.) Today, Umbra's Science-o-Matic will summarily brief us all on how the thermos/vacuum flask/Dewar flask works.

Very, very briefly, the thermos stymies the processes of heat exchange. As you know, objects want to share heat with one another through contagious molecular movement -- they're generous that way. Your warm house air wants to spread the warmth to the outside, your coffee gives its heat to the surrounding air and itself becomes tepid -- air and objects of different temperatures will exchange heat until they reach a happy medium of equality. Your coffee, just like everything containing molecules, accomplishes heat exchange in three ways. One way is infrared radiation, a form of light given off by hot items, which we feel as heat rather than see as light. A thermos attempts to minimize the transfer of radiative heat by lining the flask with shiny material, such as steel or silvered glass. The radiative heat is mostly reflected back into the coffee, and heat loss is slowed.

A vacuum flask is also designed to thwart conduction, the heat transfer that happens when molecules are touching and the hot, jumpy molecules transfer their jumpiness to cold, sluggish molecules, making the cold molecules warm. A vacuum flask is actually two flasks, one inside the other. In between the two flasks is a vacuum: no molecules at all. The coffee may be able to heat the inner flask, but there are no molecules in the vacuum to be heated and carry that heat outside the bottle, so the heat is retained in the inner flask.

The vacuum also limits the third heat transfer, convection. Hot molecules expand, become lighter, and rise to the top (of the coffee), where they usually then transfer their heat to the colder air molecules. Again, the tricky absence of molecules in a vacuum impedes this process.

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I hope you can see that as far as coffee staying hot on your ride is concerned, a vacuum flask is the answer. Obviously this must be a small (light) flask with a very tight, secure closure, which would fit inside your backpack, carrier bag, or pannier. I inadvertently bought exactly such an item a couple years back, thinking it was a travel mug; I also have a smallish thermos. Both of these would be -- in fact, are proven to be -- perfect for transporting hot beverages by bicycle. I got my "thermal wide-mouth stainless steel bottle" at Reusable Bags, but this is in no way an exclusive endorsement of that website or that particular bottle. I tell you only to give you a visual image and an idea of how to start looking for the perfect Dewar flask.

If anyone is at a loss as to how to best transport items by bicycle, and the above suggestions are Greek to you, I encourage letters on the topic. I always welcome bicycling letters, as they help with proselytizing.

By the way, Thermos is itself a brand name but also an accepted general term for vacuum flasks. I just would like to close with an apt slogan from Thermos itself: "Thermos: a brand that exists to fulfill human needs." The human needs to bike, and the human needs hot coffee -- the thermos is here.

Vacuumly,
Umbra



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The claims made in this column may not reflect the views of this magazine. Neither the magazine nor the author guarantees that any advice contained in this column is wise or safe. Please use this column at your own risk.
Umbra Fisk is Grist Research Associate II, Hardcover and Periodicals Unit, floors 2B-4B.
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Comments: (11 comments)

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Thermos

Thermos ... it keeps hot things hot, and cold things cold.  How does it know?  :-)

There are also a few bike accessory companies that make modified water bottle cages to fit thermos bottles, as well as one or two that make handlebar mounted cages for cups/travel mugs.  I can't personally vouch for either (I put my thermos in my pannier) but I know these products are available.

Bike Coffee Cup holders - link

Great (and humorous) link to bicycle and coffee related transportation products (AKA- stuff)- http://bicyclecoffeesystems.com/

Bottles and holders

I used to have a handlebar mount drink holder on my bike.  It worked very well although large bumps could cause the cup to get a little lose and you definitely need a lid.  I did not use it for coffee but it is designed to hold your typical to-go coffee cup.  I used it for less legal beverages on midnight rides for which it worked extremely well.  I moved and sold that bike and have not added it to my new bike but certainly would.  This is not designed for a Thermos however.

I just saw Sigg makes an insulated bottle but I have not tried it.  Sigg makes aluminum bottles out of recycled material with water based liners inside.  They are a little pricey but very lightweight, sturdy, and healthier than drinking bisphenol-A out of plastic bottles.  I recommend an un-painted bottle or using a plastic cage since the metal cages tend to scratch the paint.

Kevin Wright

Polar bottles also keep stuff warm

Okay so I usually use these to keep liquids cold but they do a fair job of keeping coffee hot. The starbucks on one of my routes will actually pour a cup for me straight into the bottle saving landfill space.

http://www.polarbottle.com/

Assuming you will be getting to your destination in an hour or less this should work. The difficulty with a true thermos is the inner flask / lining is susceptible to breaking from shock and vibration. These Polar bottles are plastic and last a long, long time. And yes they can be recycled.

One trick, fill with hot water before pouring in coffee and get the bodie up in temp. first.

Happy cycling! Good for you to commute by bike.

caffeine communting

The transport of hot caffeinated beverage has been essiential to my commute for years.  My coffee would stay hot enough in a little thermos even after a 25 minute ride at 25F.  Now that I shop by bike as well, I have neoprene sleeves designed for taking wine on a picnic (Every week is a picnic for us!).  Combining the two would preserve heat and lessen the risk of breakage.  My current commute is much shorter and I have taken to drinking all my coffee at home, but my coffee cup fits in my water bottle holder, so I can cart a beverage around town.

Great mug!

Hi, I use this OXO mug - it is fabulous. Really pricey, but it keeps the contents hot and it is totally spill-proof. http://www.oxo.com/OA_HTML/oxoHome.jsp?a=b

Bravo on the physics mini-lecture!

I just wanted to comment that I was very happy that Umbra used this as an opportunity to infuse a little bit of physics in her answer (i.e. heat xfer mechanisms and how they were).  Nice job! :)

coffee bikes

Funny - when I saw the headline for this Umbra column, I thought it referred to Project Rwanda and the "real" coffee bikes! If you are not familiar, check out projectrwanda.org, in particular, the Coffee Bike tab. You can support this great project, or even get your very own coffee bike, limited edition and signed by Tom Ritchey! :)

I love ask Umbra!

I've been looking to get a bottle I can take anywhere myself...I love having hot tea with me all the time...I found this one that I really like~ http://www.yourguidetogreen.com/shop/products/16_oz_Leak_ ...
peace~

My rambling 'bout this...

I have two nearly antique Stanley Co. vacuum flasks. These work very well in maintaining the temperature of whichever liquid you may be carrying. I definately would stay away from the glass-lined models as they are almost worthless when you take them out and about. Recalling my elementary school years, I have good memories of breaking not one, but two, glass-lined flasks. Break a glass-lined flask, and it's off to the landfill. Steel-lined is the way to go: no leaching of any nasty synthetic chemical and the damn things are practically bullet-proof. I found one my flasks at a resale/antique shop, and the other one is practically a family heirloom. That's abother good thing about used: no new resources were used to manufacture it. 'Tho' I will concede that the steel in any new product is almost certainly rrecycled. Metals recycling is one of the biggest businesses out there. Getting the natural cork stoppers, though, is getting harder to do. Oh, one of the other peculiarities of a vacuum flask with a natural cork stopper is that the darn things can be a BEAR to open. Seems the cork gets drawn, basically, further into the spout during the time you fill it and the first time you actually use it. Watch that coffee, it will be HOT!

The mellotron is your friend.
"best way"

 http://www.7x7sf.com/best/eat_drink/7631111.html

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