BRIEF: How Pop-Up Turkey Timers Work

BRIEF: How Pop-Up Turkey Timers Work lead image
Patrick Fitzgerald via Flickr
(Inside Science) -- What do fire sprinkler systems and pop-up turkey timers have in common? Enough, it turns out, that the first inventors of the disposable plastic sticks that now go into millions of Thanksgiving turkeys each year had their eureka moment while gazing at the ceiling.
More than 50 years ago, the California Turkey Producers Advisory Board had a problem on their hands: The timing guidelines used by many home cooks often left the poultry parched and unpalatable. Wouldn’t it be better, one board member wondered, if they could invent a gadget they could stick in the turkey to report when the bird was done?
Inspiration for the device came later, when turkey farmer and tinkerer George “Goldie” Kliewer looked at the fire sprinklers overhead. The original concept for automatic sprinklers relied on heat from a fire melting a metal alloy plug. With the plug gone, water gushed out from the pipes above. Kliewer wondered if a similar principle could be used to signal when the temperature inside a turkey had reached the right level.
The group’s original design
The designs for pop-up turkey timers have changed through the years, but the basic principle endures. Kliewer and his fellow entrepreneurs in the turkey business started a company to produce and sell turkey timers. The company was eventually sold to 3M, which itself eventually sold its pop-up business to Volk Enterprises, now one of the largest producers of the devices.
Professional chefs generally sneer at pop-up timers, preferring thermometers, and Consumer Reports has warned
Still, to many amateur cooks, the device is as essential to the holiday as stuffing, parades and football.