In another moment of inspiration from Clive's odd ebay purchases.
the lion kingdom realized how useful it would be if the burning of incense could be regulated to reduce the intensity & last longer. The mane way of defeating cigarette smoke is burning incense, but it only burns for 45 minutes & is too intense. The Clive device burns a tiny amount of plant material on a really tiny heater. It has some regulation to burn with a duty cycle & blow the smoke out. It doesn't get hot enough for the flame to be self sustaining. After a few puffs, it has to be manually reloaded.
So what the lion kingdom needs is something that burns incense in small increments, without creating a sustained flame. Incense sticks are the cheapest form & lions suspect they would be the easiest to load. The machine would advance a stick into a heating chamber. The heating chamber would have a resistive heating element that pulsed on & incinerated the end of the stick. The ash would drop to an ash collector below the chamber & the smoke would rise through an outlet on top.
The trick is getting the right temperature to not sustain the flame. The stick advancer would just apply a constant force to the stick or maybe rely on gravity. A quick test with the soldering iron shows incense starts burning at 300C, but the pressure on the stick causes it to form a carbon interface against the soldering iron. The carbon interface keeps it from advancing any further. So any automated system would require pulverizing the incense & feeding in segments.
Knowing when the segments had completely burned would be a problem. A timer would waste unburned incense. Some kind of odor sensor would be required.
Then of course, the ashes would have to not stick to the heater. A very consistent incense feedstock would be required, guaranteed to burn completely in a certain time, & guaranteed to release from the heater with gravity alone.
Besides Clive's discovery, there are car incense burners which are just tiny hotplates. They would be a starting point for the heating element. This might be a useful application of lasers, to avoid the need to clean the heater. That narrows it down to just detecting the completion of burning.
Another idea is to base it on a CNC mill. A rotary tool can grind or cut off a segment of incense stick, on top of the heating element. Then, another tool can clean off the heating element. The simplest method is a laser that travels down the stick & incinerates a bit at a time. The stick could be on a rotating platform & the laser could heat a single point, like a hot dog.
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