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todayisthedayoflove
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Friday 23 January 2026 20:44:32 GMT
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This one is honestly stupid. No candle. No flame. No stove. No fuel can. No generator noise. I set the PiggyPower Ember on hot asphalt, ran a natural thermosiphon through the unit, and let the sun do the rest. That is it. The asphalt had been baking all day, so it was still holding a ton of heat. The Ember used that heat on one side while the water loop kept the other side cooler. That temperature difference was enough to start making usable power and charge my phone. And this was around 6:30 PM. If you own solar, you already know why that matters. Late in the day, the sun is low, output drops, shade gets annoying, clouds matter more, and your panel is not exactly crushing it anymore. Solar is useful, but it depends on conditions. PiggyPower is different because it does not care where the heat comes from. A candle. A camp stove. Hot water. A wood stove. A metal plate. Asphalt that has been cooking in the sun all day. If there is usable heat on one side and water cooling on the other, the Ember can turn that difference into electricity. This is not free energy. It is not magic. It is not replacing a full solar array. It is just a different way to think about emergency power. Most backup gear is built around stored energy. Charge the battery ahead of time. Store fuel ahead of time. Hope the sun is strong when you need it. That works until it does not. The Ember is about recovering useful power from heat that is already there. That is why this matters for emergency bags, camping, off grid cabins, storm kits, blackouts, and anyone who wants more than one backup plan. When everything is normal, this looks like a weird experiment. When the power is out, small usable power is suddenly not so small. The crazy part is how simple the idea is. Heat on one side. Water cooling on the other. Power from the difference. I built PiggyPower Ember because I wanted backup power that was not completely dependent on perfect sunlight, a charged battery, or a gas can sitting in the garage. This is just one more way to use heat that would normally be wasted. Follow for more.
This one is honestly stupid. No candle. No flame. No stove. No fuel can. No generator noise. I set the PiggyPower Ember on hot asphalt, ran a natural thermosiphon through the unit, and let the sun do the rest. That is it. The asphalt had been baking all day, so it was still holding a ton of heat. The Ember used that heat on one side while the water loop kept the other side cooler. That temperature difference was enough to start making usable power and charge my phone. And this was around 6:30 PM. If you own solar, you already know why that matters. Late in the day, the sun is low, output drops, shade gets annoying, clouds matter more, and your panel is not exactly crushing it anymore. Solar is useful, but it depends on conditions. PiggyPower is different because it does not care where the heat comes from. A candle. A camp stove. Hot water. A wood stove. A metal plate. Asphalt that has been cooking in the sun all day. If there is usable heat on one side and water cooling on the other, the Ember can turn that difference into electricity. This is not free energy. It is not magic. It is not replacing a full solar array. It is just a different way to think about emergency power. Most backup gear is built around stored energy. Charge the battery ahead of time. Store fuel ahead of time. Hope the sun is strong when you need it. That works until it does not. The Ember is about recovering useful power from heat that is already there. That is why this matters for emergency bags, camping, off grid cabins, storm kits, blackouts, and anyone who wants more than one backup plan. When everything is normal, this looks like a weird experiment. When the power is out, small usable power is suddenly not so small. The crazy part is how simple the idea is. Heat on one side. Water cooling on the other. Power from the difference. I built PiggyPower Ember because I wanted backup power that was not completely dependent on perfect sunlight, a charged battery, or a gas can sitting in the garage. This is just one more way to use heat that would normally be wasted. Follow for more.

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