I-Roast 2: Converting to Stick Shift, Possible?
- coffee.me
I have an IR2 gathering dust since I got my HT-B. Now, I thought maybe if I can somehow mod it so I can manually control fan speed and heating element power, my IR2 could become a useful mini-air-roaster.
I have no electrical/electronics background. I also don't recall seeing such a mod discussed online. That said, I'd appreciate any help to start tinkering
IIRC, the IR2 had 3 fan speeds (plus one more for cooling?). Is there a way to connect a dimmer of some kind to the fan and bypass the IR2 electronics all together? On the heating element, I have no clue if the IR2 does it in steps or just ON/OFF. Bypass to a dimmer possible here too?
Sorry guys, I'm just thinking loud here. Is a very simple mod possible? A couple dimmers, a few wires and we have a completely manual IR2?
I have no electrical/electronics background. I also don't recall seeing such a mod discussed online. That said, I'd appreciate any help to start tinkering

IIRC, the IR2 had 3 fan speeds (plus one more for cooling?). Is there a way to connect a dimmer of some kind to the fan and bypass the IR2 electronics all together? On the heating element, I have no clue if the IR2 does it in steps or just ON/OFF. Bypass to a dimmer possible here too?
Sorry guys, I'm just thinking loud here. Is a very simple mod possible? A couple dimmers, a few wires and we have a completely manual IR2?
Someone over at the Green Coffee Buyers Club has added a PID to his IR2. You might want to check in over there and see if you can get more details, as I only know it was done and not exactly how.
http://www.greencoffeebuyingclub.com
Susan
http://www.greencoffeebuyingclub.com
Susan
- cafeIKE
- Supporter ❤
The big failing of the iRoar is insufficient bean agitation.
Suggest you run the fan at full speed and adjust the heat input. That's how I modded my Fresh Roast for sample roasting and it works a champ.
This could be accomplished quiet easily by wiring the fan directly to the mains [ assuming the fan motor is mains voltage
] and connecting the heating element to a variac.
[EDIT ] The Fresh Roast uses a 12vdc motor driven by a diode bridge dropped across a tap on the heating element. I connect the motor to a 13.2vdc regulated supply for constant air flow rate.
Suggest you run the fan at full speed and adjust the heat input. That's how I modded my Fresh Roast for sample roasting and it works a champ.
This could be accomplished quiet easily by wiring the fan directly to the mains [ assuming the fan motor is mains voltage

[EDIT ] The Fresh Roast uses a 12vdc motor driven by a diode bridge dropped across a tap on the heating element. I connect the motor to a 13.2vdc regulated supply for constant air flow rate.
Ian's Coffee Stuff
http://www.ieLogical.com/coffee
http://www.ieLogical.com/coffee
- coffee.me (original poster)
Thanks for the tip, Susan. I searched and searched there but didn't find much details. I understood that a member there (Cpl593h?) has PIDed his IR2, that all.
I haven't opened up my IR2 yet as I wasn't able to locate instructions/pics on modding it in ways similar to what I wanted to do. Anyone knows of such info?
I haven't opened up my IR2 yet as I wasn't able to locate instructions/pics on modding it in ways similar to what I wanted to do. Anyone knows of such info?
Oops, sorry, I didn't mean to suggest that the hows and wherefores were there. I did think you could post and ask for more information. I would be curious myself, but I'm nowhere near equipped at this point to follow up and actually "DO" anything, so.....I thought I'd send you into the fray and ride along on your coattails....
Susan


Susan
- coffee.me (original poster)
Not at all, your reply was clear, thanks again, it was the reason I registered on yet one more coffee-related forum
. Posting there? hmmm, it took me a year or two to start posting on HB....so 2011 will probably be the year I start doing so on GCBC
.
Back to IR2, I dunno, maybe I'll end opening her up to see what's inside


Back to IR2, I dunno, maybe I'll end opening her up to see what's inside

- coffee.me (original poster)
Wasn't kidding when I said it was gathering dust
I opened her up and it doesn't look simple (to my no electrical/electronics background eyes, hopefully not to yours
). So, I took 3 initial photos till I learn my way around.
1st: the base opened like an egg. The bottom part has what looks like the controls and the upper part should have the heating element and the fan.
2nd: the bottom in focus, what's (A)?
3rd: the meat. There's a thermostat, what looks like a motor (B), for the fan?
Any ideas on what to open up next or modify or test?

I opened her up and it doesn't look simple (to my no electrical/electronics background eyes, hopefully not to yours

1st: the base opened like an egg. The bottom part has what looks like the controls and the upper part should have the heating element and the fan.
2nd: the bottom in focus, what's (A)?
3rd: the meat. There's a thermostat, what looks like a motor (B), for the fan?
Any ideas on what to open up next or modify or test?
- coffee.me (original poster)
I further butchered my IR2, and getting closer to figuring it out but have some questions.
1st is the fan:
It looks like I could simply connect the two wires in the photo to a dimmer and I'm done with fan control. Any thoughts, confirmations?
Next is the heating element (or is it elements????):
-(2) & (3), the fiber string(?) is connected to nothing. The spring is connected to wires (which are then connected to the control board) on the backside. Is this one complete heating element? How should I connect it directly to electricity (well, a dimmer really)?
-(4) & (5), is this another, smaller, heating element? The spring and fiber string(?) of this one are connected together as you can see. Should I connect this one like I would do with (2) & (3)?
-What's (1)?
-What's the thing on the 1st photo(with "???")?
We're almost there, guys
. Would really, really, appreciate your insight.
1st is the fan:
It looks like I could simply connect the two wires in the photo to a dimmer and I'm done with fan control. Any thoughts, confirmations?
Next is the heating element (or is it elements????):
-(2) & (3), the fiber string(?) is connected to nothing. The spring is connected to wires (which are then connected to the control board) on the backside. Is this one complete heating element? How should I connect it directly to electricity (well, a dimmer really)?
-(4) & (5), is this another, smaller, heating element? The spring and fiber string(?) of this one are connected together as you can see. Should I connect this one like I would do with (2) & (3)?
-What's (1)?
-What's the thing on the 1st photo(with "???")?
We're almost there, guys

On photo "3rd, the meat", the "Thermostat" looks to be in the position where the roasting pot interlock switch should be. I'm guessing on the other side of the plastic casting, there is a little triangular arm/button with a notch out of it - pushing that should actuate the switch.
The red circle with ??? looks to be a thermal switch - it should open (or close) when a certain temperature is reached. It's likely there as a safety - if the thing hits some magical temperature (let's say 600F), shut down the power, because it's about to catch fire.
The fiber strings look to be there to hold the heating element coils in place, so that they don't wander away and touch something they shouldn't. I see the same construction on air poppers. They are not electrical components, they are mechanical components.
Component identification:
(1) Looks to be either a thermal fuse, thermocouple, or other temperature sensor. I'm guessing that the reason the thermocouple readings are so inaccurate in these things is because of the riveted connections - thermocouples really need to have wires which go all the way back to the measuring circuit. (Every dissimilar metal junction counts as another thermocouple, so you've got a whole bunch of uncalibrated thermocouples working together to throw each other off, plus one real thermocouple that's trying hard to give accurate results.) I'm guessing the leads from here go back to the control board.
(2) to (3) Has the look of the main heating element. Using an ohmmeter (or ohm setting on a multimeter/VOM), I'm going to guess this reads around 15 ohms from point 2 to point 3. If that's the case, hooking it up to line AC should give you about an 8 amp draw, or a 960 watt (input) heater. If it's lower ohms, it should be more amps and more watts.
(4) to (5) look like a secondary heater, possibly used to drop the motor speed in the original design. If it's similar to popcorn machines, that's likely to be 60-70 ohms, which would mean about a 2 amp draw, and about 240 watt heater if hooked directly to line AC.
Hooking the two fan motor wires to a dimmer is probably a bad idea - a fan motor speed control would be better, so you don't burn out your motor, and can get full speed out of it. Poking around and looking at Johnson spec sheets, looks like a 1 amp 120V motor, but under harsh loads that might go up to 1.5 amp. A 200 watt or 2 amp (or greater) fan controller should handle it.
You previously asked about what the thing was on the aluminum heatsink. ("Whats (A)?") Looks to be a voltage regulator, but possibly is a triac. Looks like the control component modules are an AC control board (at 9 o'clock), a low voltage control board (with the LCD panel/buttons, 12 o'clock), and a regulator (6 o'clock).
Happy hacking.
The red circle with ??? looks to be a thermal switch - it should open (or close) when a certain temperature is reached. It's likely there as a safety - if the thing hits some magical temperature (let's say 600F), shut down the power, because it's about to catch fire.
The fiber strings look to be there to hold the heating element coils in place, so that they don't wander away and touch something they shouldn't. I see the same construction on air poppers. They are not electrical components, they are mechanical components.
Component identification:
(1) Looks to be either a thermal fuse, thermocouple, or other temperature sensor. I'm guessing that the reason the thermocouple readings are so inaccurate in these things is because of the riveted connections - thermocouples really need to have wires which go all the way back to the measuring circuit. (Every dissimilar metal junction counts as another thermocouple, so you've got a whole bunch of uncalibrated thermocouples working together to throw each other off, plus one real thermocouple that's trying hard to give accurate results.) I'm guessing the leads from here go back to the control board.
(2) to (3) Has the look of the main heating element. Using an ohmmeter (or ohm setting on a multimeter/VOM), I'm going to guess this reads around 15 ohms from point 2 to point 3. If that's the case, hooking it up to line AC should give you about an 8 amp draw, or a 960 watt (input) heater. If it's lower ohms, it should be more amps and more watts.
(4) to (5) look like a secondary heater, possibly used to drop the motor speed in the original design. If it's similar to popcorn machines, that's likely to be 60-70 ohms, which would mean about a 2 amp draw, and about 240 watt heater if hooked directly to line AC.
Hooking the two fan motor wires to a dimmer is probably a bad idea - a fan motor speed control would be better, so you don't burn out your motor, and can get full speed out of it. Poking around and looking at Johnson spec sheets, looks like a 1 amp 120V motor, but under harsh loads that might go up to 1.5 amp. A 200 watt or 2 amp (or greater) fan controller should handle it.
You previously asked about what the thing was on the aluminum heatsink. ("Whats (A)?") Looks to be a voltage regulator, but possibly is a triac. Looks like the control component modules are an AC control board (at 9 o'clock), a low voltage control board (with the LCD panel/buttons, 12 o'clock), and a regulator (6 o'clock).
Happy hacking.
- coffee.me (original poster)
Oh William, thank you, thank you, thank you
. . . . that was thorough, clear and extremely helpful.

Man, thanks again, you've made my day!

Yup, 16ohms. So, connecting a wire to each point from a dimmer would work, right?Espin wrote:(2) to (3) Has the look of the main heating element. Using an ohmmeter (or ohm setting on a multimeter/VOM), I'm going to guess this reads around 15 ohms from point 2 to point 3. If that's the case, hooking it up to line AC should give you about an 8 amp draw, or a 960 watt (input) heater. If it's lower ohms, it should be more amps and more watts.
This one reads 29ohms, so, something like 4amps/450watts? Dimmer+wires would work here too?Espin wrote:(4) to (5) look like a secondary heater, possibly used to drop the motor speed in the original design. If it's similar to popcorn machines, that's likely to be 60-70 ohms, which would mean about a 2 amp draw, and about 240 watt heater if hooked directly to line AC.
I'll google the difference between the two; but I can just hook them directly to AC for full power, right?Espin wrote:Hooking the two fan motor wires to a dimmer is probably a bad idea - a fan motor speed control would be better, so you don't burn out your motor, and can get full speed out of it. Poking around and looking at Johnson spec sheets, looks like a 1 amp 120V motor, but under harsh loads that might go up to 1.5 amp. A 200 watt or 2 amp (or greater) fan controller should handle it.
Makes sense as the thing won't run till the pot is locked.Espin wrote:On photo "3rd, the meat", the "Thermostat" looks to be in the position where the roasting pot interlock switch should be. I'm guessing on the other side of the plastic casting, there is a little triangular arm/button with a notch out of it - pushing that should actuate the switch.
So the smart thing to do is to try not to bypass it; just in case.Espin wrote:The red circle with ??? looks to be a thermal switch - it should open (or close) when a certain temperature is reached. It's likely there as a safety - if the thing hits some magical temperature (let's say 600F), shut down the power, because it's about to catch fire.
only if you knew what I thought of these at firstEspin wrote:The fiber strings look to be there to hold the heating element coils in place, so that they don't wander away and touch something they shouldn't. I see the same construction on air poppers. They are not electrical components, they are mechanical components.

Leads go to the LCD...probably nothing to do with my mod except maybe to hang a MET TC ontoEspin wrote:(1) Looks to be either a thermal fuse, thermocouple, or other temperature sensor. I'm guessing that the reason the thermocouple readings are so inaccurate in these things is because of the riveted connections - thermocouples really need to have wires which go all the way back to the measuring circuit. (Every dissimilar metal junction counts as another thermocouple, so you've got a whole bunch of uncalibrated thermocouples working together to throw each other off, plus one real thermocouple that's trying hard to give accurate results.) I'm guessing the leads from here go back to the control board.

Man, thanks again, you've made my day!