UTVolinExile
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You can make small or big ones. It's basically burning wood in an oxygen starved environment, you're really burning the gases off of it. Take a 55 gal barrel, lay on its side and fill full of your chosen wood. Weld up 2 braces to get it a foot or so off the ground. At the top weld 2 pipes that go up about a foot or so, 2or 3 inch pipes. Elbow 90 to side the width of the barrel, then down, then underneath. Drill holes in pipe that is now underneath the barrel. Put some wood underneath the barrel and set ablaze. After about 10 minutes the steam from the wood inside the barrel will be driven off and the gases will ignite and you will have one hell of a roaring and dangerous situation if the pipe and holes are too small. The gases ignite and bake the wood inside creating even more gases creating a helluva cycle. Pyro dream situation. When it goes out wait a long time before opening it... The next day open and you have charcoal. Google pyrolosis and biochar. I make small camp stoves, can inside a can that are much smaller and safer to start with. I've made rocket stoves and such. Fire brick pizza ovens. I am now tackling the mastery of masonry heaters. I get ceramic fiber, firebrick, satanite, and refractory cement from harbison walker in Knoxville. I've always been interested in the efficient creation of heat. So sorry for the novel. Biochar will give your garden one helluva kick in the ass as well
Something similar to what I was describing, not safe having one outlet IMO in case it gummed up.
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Finally, I would suggest subscribing to jw934 channel on YouTube. He's a jap who has some genius ideas for simple stoves, many of which I've built. I'd try the can inside a can, you just drill some holes in the right locations you could have one burning at your house in 15 min
One of his: http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=xU6zkhbo_gU
The one I've tinkered with http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6XxL6pPGGCE
What is your opinion regarding the rocket mass stove?
You might as well start a thread in the pub gents. You know that's where this conversation is landing :hi:
Nick I understand where you're coming from but he's signed already so... All threads are cluttered and meander....
it's one thing to sit around and bs with each other... we do that all the time.. it will get back on topic if something newsworthy happens. The previous may be off topic but at least it's disseminating something useful and I hope interesting to some
exhibit A cherry thread and using spikes as evidence speed is not needed at lb... forget the all world defense surrounding him
Sto I need to to find a way to get in touch with you. I would love to learn more and how to build them. I am mechanically inclined since I been in the metal fab business for 18 years.
Email freak and have him email me your email address, reference this post number (1615) in the Pearson thread
You have harbison walker or anh refractory close to you in Chatt. Lots of boiler furnaces down there and railroad type stuff. I think there is a brick plant too. Stop by and ask somebody where to buy refractory... It is so much easier to make your stuff that way. Make a wood mold, pour, vibrate.
All of this appeals to the engineer in me.
Sto I have to be honest. I have no idea what you're talking about, but I'm reading everything you're posting and I feel like I'm becoming a better man from it haha
Lulz. I should bring one to a game. If you like your steak Pittsburg style, pronto crispy outside, bloody as hell inside, a rocket stove is perfect. The temp is around 1000 f leaving the heat riser. Now that's searing
Lulz. I should bring one to a game. If you like your steak Pittsburg style, pronto crispy outside, bloody as hell inside, a rocket stove is perfect. The temp is around 1000 f leaving the heat riser. Now that's searing
I made a rocket stove once that was made out of hardee backer.. The stuff used for tiles if you're familiar. Inside the j shaped contraption I put 2500 degree ceramic fiber blanket. Bought 55 lb bag of satanite and mixed it thin so it was like paint, maybe a little thicker. Coated the whole thing inside. Fired it up and you could still touch the outside of the stove after I had just melted aluminum with it... Lol. There's a really cool site called backyardmetalcasting that is really neat. These guys make charcoal burners, propane, used oil. They're are a very few who even melt iron. That is hot my friend. I haven't gotten into metals yet but maybe someday. I just tinker around sometimes, occasionally with dangerous shat. I'm not great at math or physics, chemistry, but I stay after it til I feel like I know just enough to be dangerous, then I let her rip. My education was in biology so go figure
Lulz. I should bring one to a game. If you like your steak Pittsburg style, pronto crispy outside, bloody as hell inside, a rocket stove is perfect. The temp is around 1000 f leaving the heat riser. Now that's searing