I already looked into this.
It looks attractive, but it’s less effective than boiling the plant matter in a pot. Basically it re-circulates the used extraction water over and over. It boils the water at the base. When the water comes to a boil, it rises up a little tube and is dispensed above the coffee grounds in an upper chamber. Used extraction water then drips down through the grounds, and then drips back down into the base. Once the water is saturated it no longer extracts anything from the plant matter.
A Soxhlet is similar, but instead of re-circulating used extraction water, it circulates fresh distilled water. That’s many times more efficient than the percolator. After many hours, the percolator’s water becomes saturated and can no longer extract anything from the coffee. This doesn’t happen in a Soxhlet. In a Soxhlet, the water that circulates is distilled water and not saturated so it can endlessly extract from the coffee until every last bit of what’s in the coffee is extracted.
You are better off boiling it, then straining, and then boiling again in new water. With boiling, the plant matter bounces all around and this constant movement causes extraction efficiency to go up dramatically.
Basically the only difference between boiling the plant matter in a pot and using a percolator is that the percolator takes much longer to extract the same amount. Both use the same extraction method: boiling water. Boiling in a pot, the plant matter is completely surrounded with the water. In the percolator, the water is just dripping through it, and it cools down while this happens, so not only is the plant matter not surrounded by water, it’s also not at the boiling point. Efficiency is lost, more power is needed to run it, but you don’t need to watch it. The trade off is convenience over efficiency.
It’s definitely much more convenient to use a percolator.
When extracting something like caapi which is very tough to extract, it’s going to take a long time in the percolator, and cost a lot of electricity to keep it running. But it’s very convenient and will work.
I think the main drawback to using a percolator, even a 100 cup version, is that it doesn’t hold much plant matter. You can put a lot more plant matter in a large pot. A 100 cup percolator can hold about 6 cups of crushed herbs and will take about 2 hours to extract the same amount of coffee that would take only 20 minutes on a stove top in a large pot of water.
It’s going to take about 6 times as long as boiling in a pot of water. So consider that. You could run it overnight IF it doesn’t have auto-shutoff. Most of them do have an auto-shutoff feature and it can’t be bypassed to allow it to run more than the preset auto-shutoff time (normally 100-200 minutes for a 100 cup machine). So be aware of that. It's best to get the cheap manual ones with NO automatic circuits of any kind. Make sure you check the specs. Just because the ad doesn’t mention auto-shutoff, doesn’t mean it lacks this feature. Many have this feature.
You may remember me as 69Ron. I was suspended years ago for selling bunk products under false pretenses. I try to sneak back from time to time under different names, but unfortunately, the moderators of the DMT-Nexus are infinitely smarter than I am.
If you see me at the waterpark, please say hello. I'll be the delusional 50 something in the American flag Speedo, oiling up his monster guns while responding to imaginary requests for selfies from invisible teenage girls.