I bought a 27 (30 ish) litre bucket with a plastic tap.
I bought 2 homebase value kettles for £5 each (plus I had a 15% off voucher) and dismantled them.

To stop the elements switching off during the boil I disabled the thermal switches. The top switch simply flicks the main switch off (as if you switched it off yourself) I removed this completely. I was about to remove the the other one (which is a safety cut out) but I noticed that it presses a small rod into the plastic body of the element and breaks the live connection therfore it was only necessary to remove this little rod. (see pic below)


Next I needed to make holes. With aid of a 4cm Q-Max cutter kindly lent to me by Tequilla6 I made perfect 4cm holes

I needed some plastic washers because the the Youngs bucket is thinner than the body of the kettle.
I fitted and tested one element first to check that it wouldn't leak.

It didn't!

I fitted the other one.

I decided to leave the little neon bulbs on so that's obvious when each element is on,


Time for a real test: Boil 25 litres, outdoors (for safety), on probably the coldest day of the year.

The water came out of the tap at 9 degrees C

The big ceremonial switch on.


The whole thing (with snow).




The power meter read about 0.5kW before I switched it on, so it's about 4.3kW.

No leaks so far.

I monitored the temps as it came to boil.
0mins 9C
10mins 32C
20mins 49C
30mins 69C
40mins 85C
50mins 96C
Total time to boil 53 mins (quite slow but the air temp was below 0C)
Boil for an hour on both elements to give it a real test.

Lost about 6 litres over the hour

I'm pretty pleased with it and I think the boil time will be much faster when starting with warm wort from the mash tun (and it a slightly less chilly environment)
BTW, I did use RCDs on the the extension leads and pluged them into different sockets.