🍯 Keep Your Honey Happy!
The Powerblanket BB05GV Bee Blanket is a specialized 5-gallon pail heater designed to maintain honey at optimal temperatures, preventing crystallization and preserving nutrients. With a unique cutout for gate valves and an efficient heating area of 3.05 square feet, this product combines functionality with energy-saving technology.
T**E
Not too hot, not too cold but just right.
This took and day and a half to warm up a cold 5 gallon/60lb bucket of raw honey but it works good. I have no issues with it and it may but a bit pricey but I needed it and it's a charm.
B**N
Works great
Very nice, keeps the bucket warm
P**.
Honey warmer
Works wonderful. Just what I needed Heat retention:
A**R
Does not work
Worked good for 1 season. Heated up to 165 degrees and burned 60lbs of honey. Now it's not heating at all.
D**P
It liquefies but gets too hot for raw honey….
Rarely will I write a product review. However, as a small level bee farmer I thought this may be helpful.This thing works! It liquefies honey in a bucket. However, it gets too hot. It says it heats to 100 degrees Fahrenheit (too hot for me), but it’s more like 115 degrees. If you don’t care about raw honey this won’t matter. I do.I suggest you get a temp controller where you can set the temperature and it will regulate the electrical current and thus the temperature. For me, this is 95 degrees or hive temperature. I set on 95, put a piece of foam insulation under the bucket, tin foil on top, and use a really big spoon for making mead or wine to stir it twice daily. Takes about 2-4 days but your honey is raw.I used a past review for jars. I put a towel down, place the blanket down flat. Put 12 jars on one side of it. Fold the bee blanket over the top and strap down. Put the other half of the towel over it to hold in the heat. Set the temp on my temp controller to 95 and let it go for 2-4 days and it works great.I like this product. Works great. But if you sell or want raw honey, you HAVE to use a temperature regulator.
J**Y
I was skeptical at first, but then 😍
So heres to a decent/even good product.I wish the version with spigot cut out came with an adjustable thermostat, however its not really necessary.This years crop started crystalizing almost immediately after harvest, so i purchased this to liquefy it up for bottling. Worked like a charm. First batch left on for 72 hrs and it worked like a charm. I didnt think to check accual temp of honey, however it wasnt to hot to the tongue 😁. My only problem was that it didnt do much with the bottom lets say 1" in the bucket.. it was liquefied but still gritty and opaque. Next bucket I left for a week what with the holidays and all... but once again I still ended up with my last 4 or jars gritty and opaque. Guess ill buy a fermentation warmer pad in the future...Another plus for this blanket is i also did a case of jars from a few years ago.. First i tried just placing them on blanket with no results.. but then after 3 days of nothing i decided to cover them with a towel, and voila, the next day they were clear and runny as harvest day...In conclusion, yes I would recommend this product for the hobbiest beek who doesnt have access to a heated honey house, or doesnt feel like spending the money on building a "cabinet" type warmer.
P**E
Needs another device not to ruin the honey
I dont leave many reviews but honey is EXPENSIVE & easily ruined. This blanket while not perfect it can be perfect with little extra iten!The good- device seems well build- heats up quickly- has a thermostat- straps around 5gal. bucket well- has cutout for gate valve- is insulatedThe bad:I tested on a bucket of water it reached water temperature of 114F - at that temperature honey is ruined!!!!Made it better by getting this https://a.co/d/1wTCu0aI attached outlet wired thermocouple to the bucket using insulated foam tape.then set it up to turn heater on at 94F and turn of at 99.9F.1. Now the blanket never reaches tempetrature of ruining the AWESOME PROPERTIES of honey.2. If thermostatic outlet fails i have internal thermostat to fall back on!3. Once honey becomes fully convective you can start slowly reducing the outlet temp to keep lowest temperature of honey without crystalizing!Now i trust this blanket to keep my honey yummy while preserving its AWESOME HEALTH benefits!Good luck to y'all
M**K
Excellent answer for Honey Warming in 5-gallon pails!
I'm just a small amateur beekeeper looking for a good way to warm my 5-gallon pails of honey safely and efficiently. So when I spotted the BeeBlanket on Amazon it looked like something that might work well for me.My order arrived quickly (thanks Amazon Prime) and after a quick inspection it was wrapped around a full pail for warming. After 24 hours my honey went from 62°F to a nice 104°F in a room with an ambient temperature of roughly 68°F throughout the process. Also, I placed my cold pail on a chunk of ridgid foam insulation to minimize heat transfer from the cold floor.Admittedly I haven't warmed a stone-cold pail of crystallized honey with it, that will be later. Warming and re-liquefying a 5-gallon pail of honey would be a multi-day project in my estimation. Slow and steady like the bees...So far I'm impressed with the BeeBlanket and it's working good for my purposes. 104° honey is easy to strain and bottle plus it's safe for the honey! Using a 120 watt insulated blanket seems efficient to me and it worked quite well. My Kill-A-Watt meter is currently monitoring the power consumption so I'll update this review later.PowerBlanket also offers a version of the BeeBlanket that has a cutout for a honey gate (BB05GV) so that's on my wishlist for the future.UPDATE: After running my BeeBlanket for a full 24 hours on a cool bucket of honey my Kill-A-Watt meter gave me a daily cost of 0.08/day for an operating cost. (Power rate here is 0.102/kh) Seems like that's a pretty reasonable way to warm 5 gallons of honey. I'm sold on this!
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