It’s a standard rocket stove using bricks…nothing extraordinary.
LaconicLacedaemonian
it’s just a draft fireplace. The rising air feeds fresh air to the fire. This makes the fire burn hotter, more completely, with less smoke.
Coat the bricks in clay or mud for extra efficiency.
afriendsname
I can’t hear the birds because of your explanation, please add more sound effects
TheStax84
I’m not sure those are the correct bricks to be building a stove
bobmlord1
50% less than what? Modern wood stoves are super efficient at turning wood to heat with very little waste.
Dank_Nicholas
I wish the mods would ban this spammer.
gnarley_haterson
Yes. A rocket stove. This is ancient technology, there’s nothing “alleged” about it.
johnnyg883
Built a bit bigger this might be good for cooking down maple sap for a small batch syrup operation. But other than that I don’t see a practical use. If I need to cook food I use the charcoal grill or my kitchen stove.
AlertMail8780
Thats how Aztec cook
adp1314
Dude discovered the chimenea
Fifteen_inches
I mean, you are just deflecting heat towards the pot. You can get even higher levels of efficiency if you encase the bricking in heat refractory cement.
The basics of an oven are the basics of an oven.
Townsend and primitive technology has some pretty good vids about furnaces from scratch.
Worst-Lobster
If someone wanted to mortar the bricks down what would be best ?
SupremelyUneducated
A brick or two over the intake would probably improve combustion a noticeable amount, by helping the air heat before combustion. This is an effective simple design for getting most of the benefit of a conventional rocket stove design, but the material (while very low cost) isn’t optimal for the riser/combustion chamber getting hot, that brick probably never stops sucking up heat, if just boiling a liter or two. A better insulator (cob with vermiculite), or a thinner heat tolerant masonry with less mass to warm up, would help the combustion chamber to burn more efficiently sooner.
Still a very good way to go, I’ve just been working on a form to pour a rocket stove core recently, so I’ve been reading about this a lot lately.
Cottager_Northeast
Wastes bricks instead of wood. Firebricks are a thing, but that’s not what he’s using. In not too long, thermal stress will start cracking those.
Wheresthepig
Stay Tuned! Next week I will show you how to change the air in your Subaru tires.
rainloxreally
Less firewood than what? That’s the important part. Probably less than a regular campfire.
16 Comments
It’s a standard rocket stove using bricks…nothing extraordinary.
it’s just a draft fireplace. The rising air feeds fresh air to the fire. This makes the fire burn hotter, more completely, with less smoke.
Coat the bricks in clay or mud for extra efficiency.
I can’t hear the birds because of your explanation, please add more sound effects
I’m not sure those are the correct bricks to be building a stove
50% less than what? Modern wood stoves are super efficient at turning wood to heat with very little waste.
I wish the mods would ban this spammer.
Yes. A rocket stove. This is ancient technology, there’s nothing “alleged” about it.
Built a bit bigger this might be good for cooking down maple sap for a small batch syrup operation. But other than that I don’t see a practical use. If I need to cook food I use the charcoal grill or my kitchen stove.
Thats how Aztec cook
Dude discovered the chimenea
I mean, you are just deflecting heat towards the pot. You can get even higher levels of efficiency if you encase the bricking in heat refractory cement.
The basics of an oven are the basics of an oven.
Townsend and primitive technology has some pretty good vids about furnaces from scratch.
If someone wanted to mortar the bricks down what would be best ?
A brick or two over the intake would probably improve combustion a noticeable amount, by helping the air heat before combustion. This is an effective simple design for getting most of the benefit of a conventional rocket stove design, but the material (while very low cost) isn’t optimal for the riser/combustion chamber getting hot, that brick probably never stops sucking up heat, if just boiling a liter or two. A better insulator (cob with vermiculite), or a thinner heat tolerant masonry with less mass to warm up, would help the combustion chamber to burn more efficiently sooner.
Still a very good way to go, I’ve just been working on a form to pour a rocket stove core recently, so I’ve been reading about this a lot lately.
Wastes bricks instead of wood. Firebricks are a thing, but that’s not what he’s using. In not too long, thermal stress will start cracking those.
Stay Tuned! Next week I will show you how to change the air in your Subaru tires.
Less firewood than what? That’s the important part. Probably less than a regular campfire.