Its very easy to make coffee in your Revere Ware pot if it has the "guts" in it that is.
The basket holds the coffee. Take the guts out and put water in to the line that marks the 8 cups of water mark. Load your basket with the coffee, 4 scoops would be fine. (You may want to use a coarse grind of coffee as the coffee ground for coffeemakers today are finer and would end up in your coffee cup!) Put the basket together on the stand and put back into the coffee pot and put the lid on the pot and then you put it on the stove and boil. It will get stronger the longer it perks so if you want stronger coffee let it perk longer. If you want a nice cup of coffee, I would only let it perk a couple of minutes. I use a coffee pot when we camp and that's how I gauge it over a campfire and how I do it at home on my stove. The longer it perks the stronger the coffee. And it tastes better than coffeemaker coffee too!
I got a vintage 8 cup Revere drip coffee maker off of eBay. I tried the above method and nothing happened except boiling water. I then boiled water in a tea kettle and added coffee grounds to the top part and placed what looks like a plunger in that. The 'plunger' has a few very small holes in it to allow the hot water to seep onto the grounds. The key to brewing coffee is not to boil it, but to allow near boiling water to pass through the grounds in a matter of a few minutes. This brings out the full flavour of the coffee without leaching the bitter acids from the grounds. My step-grandmother used to make what we called sheep camp coffee by bringing water to boil in an old granite pot and tossing in the coffee grounds and letting the coffee boil for a while and then she would add egg shells to settle the grounds. Needless to say, she was the only one who drank the coffee, the rest of us drank tea which she could not boil the piss out of it.
Initially, I thought the pot worked like a French press by adding the hot water to the top and then the coffee grounds and the pushing the hot water slowly through the grounds. However, the hot water poured into the the lower pot without brewing the coffee sufficiently. Then I tried it with the plunger in place and this impeded the flow of hot water to correctly brew the coffee.
Put the basket bottom on the stem.
Put the water in the pot and then put the coffee in the basket. I tblsp per cup is typical but some people like it stronger. Put the top on the basket, put the whole thing in the pot and fit the stem into the bottom.
Put the pot on the stove and heat on medium high. Watch the glass lid and when the coffee is the color you like, it is done.
This pot makes the BEST cup of coffee PERIOD. I do not like any new pot, or any drip, espresso machine, etc.
I hope that this helps.
A pre-measured amount of water is brought to near boiling in the lower kettle. A corresponding amount of drip-grind coffee is placed in the basket, and the basket then attached to the bottom of the clear Pyrex upper bowl. Insert the plastic control valve firmly onto the filter (inside and at the base of the upper bowl), and pour the hot water into it. The control valve *must* be seated firmly to prevent leakage! Once all the water has been poured into the upper bowl, place it on top of the kettle. Gently push the control valve stem to one side to break the seal, and remove it. Cap the upper bowl with the lid. Water drips through the filter, into the coffee grounds, through the perforated bottom of the basket, and into the kettle. Once brewing is completed, remove the upper bowl (it's hot!), and cap the kettle.
Singerco.com
Try Ebay. There is a chainsaw manual store on ebay. I bought a few vintage ones from them.
------ I don't know exactly, I am researching about my Revere Pressure cooker and have found many people looking for parts. Apparently, Revere went bankrupt in 2002, but seems to have been bought out (?) by World Kitchen, which is marketing the Revere line, albeit, it seems offering only the most popular items. Possibly a visit to worldkitchen.com and an email inquiry might steer you in the right direction, or you'll just have to hunt around at thrift stores, craigslist, Ebay or your local junk auction house and estate sales. I know this isn't the best answer, but maybe it will steer you in the right direction. As I'm looking for Revere parts for my Revere pressure cooker, I'd like to know if someone else has any resources. ------ You can buy new replacement parts for the vintage era Revere Ware cookware now at http://www.reverewareparts.com, including handles, pressure cooker gaskets, screws and nuts, and lid knobs. I was a frustrated Revere Ware fan that couldn't find parts so I went and had them made. I also just (1/30/09) posted a link to a pdf of a Revere Ware pressure cooker manual: http://www.reverewareparts.com/estore/Vintage-4-Quart-Pressure-Cookers.html
You can find a user manual online through the coffee manufacturing company. The user manuals are usually available online but can also be requested through the mail.
I need a jug for my westpoint coffee maker
Some automatic coffee machines make better coffee and some worse. It depends on the milling quality of coffee, temperature, pressure and filters used by most coffee machine.The quality of coffee depends on your own taste.
There will be a slight difference in taste using the manual machine as opposed to the Super-Automatic, because you control the manual machine as far as water and coffee, which may make the coffee more or less strong, depending on your use.
according to CompTIA A+ guide to hardware Lab Manual: "Any visible copper is an indication you need a new cable." -jazzmarazz13
I was given a Monarch 6A vintage machine without the manual. I am having great difficulty trying to thread it.
Here's the site I downloaded the manual from.http://www.reverewareparts.com/estore/Meal-n-Minutes-Electric-Pressure-Cooker.html
Check eBay in Sports / hunting / Vintage. They are up for bid every week.
The model 105 manual clipper is currently (2013) selling for under $100.00. The model 105 is a vintage clipper and is no longer being manufactured. eBay has the model 105 listed between $4.00 and $65.00.