i love it! i've worked a bit with burning veg oil a while back and found that the secret is that it does not wick like normal lamp oil, so my lamps usually were low pools of oil with a cotton wad in the middle as a sort of mound-wick. however i'm excited to see that you used a cotton rope of some kind - what is it from? and thanks for all your awesome videos and work, i've been very inspired by your projects over the years!!
since you do alot of work have you ever thought of using a heater called the sawdust stove (youtube it), the short version is you pack the sawdust tightly into a coffee tin with a hole in the middle and and light a small paper fire at teh bottom of the hole, then the heat deaws the air fromt eh bottom creatinga vortex which heats the room.
One other heating solution is a toilet paper roll in a coffee can soaked in rubbing alcohol, though I've only seen this for exterior use. FYI, love theTYH videos! Keep up the creations!
I had to use a popcorn oil lantern once to see by while fixing a generator. The good part is that burning popcorn oil (has butter flavor) is that your space starts to smell like yummy popcorn! Is good, yes? I thank you for giving me inspiration for a greenhouse for my wife, and a hunting shack for my neighbor.
the other day my friends and I were talking about how you can use your left over bacon grease as fuel for a candle the same way you used vegetable oil as fuel. Have you ever heard of using bacon grease that way? honestly, we end up using our leftover bacon grease for other cooking but if someone ate A LOT of bacon, I guess it would feasibly be a "free" lantern fuel. ~Amanda
@1971mgb hit the nail on the head with the clay pot for radiation of the heat. The concept of the outside air for burning is perfect. The only thing I would do different is perhaps make an "air chamber" below the oil can so if there is a grease fire there is an air barer and also a place for any split oil to flow. Simply another coffee can with some wire screen over the top. As you said use at own risk and expand on the idea. The possibilities are endless. Great channel - found you through NPR
Don't know if the rocket stove guy understands it but a thermal mass rocket stove is great if you have the space for the mass. Does he even see you are heating 30 sq ft? 3 foot dry saplings?
As a side note a well seasoned clay flower pot radiates the heat far better and more evenly than tin cans when building a small tea light candle or oil wick heater for use in an ultra small cabin.
I enjoy your vids and ideas Deek, and the hair thing is commendable indeed. Gonna grow it back though? The long hair was hawt :] ok, i'm done being shallow, carry on
I enjoy your vids and ideas Deek, and the hair thing is commendable indeed. Goona grow it back though? The long hair was hawt :] ok, i'm done being shallow, carry on
Have you thought about putting a sm. solar can heater on the side of the shack? You could just go with a fan less set up as not much heat needed. Keep up the good work.
Rocket stoves are extremely efficient and effective in heating small spaces and best of all, you can use them for cooking. Tons of models, check out the related videos:
6 brick rocket stove in Africa: /watch?v=vJ7WjwAqeX0
I applaud your efforts but it's really a gawmey conglomeration of poorly thought out bits. Much better to make a 6 to 16 brick (which you can make by hand out of cob) rocket stove, wrap it in cob and run a chimney outside. That way you don't need industrial civ to provide veggie oil and instead can use small diameter sticks of wood that you can gather anywhere from the woods around you. All that cob becomes thermal mass to reradiate the heat.
@MrFinger8r Hey, no offence taken, although you seem a little harsh. I'm not sure what you mean by "gawmey"- I don't think that's even a word. Anyway- very familiar with rocket stoves- the prob with burning "small sticks"- you're feeding the fire every twenty minutes. To combat that you can build a more sizeable stove, but then it defeats this videos goal of small, salvage-junk-built stove. All in all, I self-mentioned many shortcoming of this idea, so I appreciate the input!
@relaxshacksDOTcom LOL, yeah gawmey is a local word, guess ya gotta be from Maine where everyone knows it, and I didn't intend harsh at all, if that's what came thru, sorry dude. It's the inadequacy of text to convey emotion accurately. My bad. :)
No was just saying, clearly you spent a lot of engineering time thinking about it. And hey, the Inuit used to heat an entire igloo with a few teardrop shaped oil lamps, so there is a rich ancestry behind your idea. (cont'd)
one of the cool things about rocket stoves is to make the feed tube vertical so it becomes gravity fed, put 3 foot dry saplings in and they burn down over time so you're not throwing stuff in every 15 minutes. But if you are already aware of those, then nuthin new here. Thanks for what you are doing and for sharing it. :-)
@relaxshacksDOTcom@MrFinger8r You guys are all wasteful in your ideas of a stove, why not a bunch of heavy blankets to keep your selves warm. Im building a 4x8 cabin thats 7 1/2 ft tall. I will send you both a video of, to show you guys.
deek, how 'bout telling us the before and after temperature of the shack to get a feel for its heat. and damn boy, 1st time ever your hair is shorter than mine!!
My hair touches my calves. I get asked about donating it every day I go somewhere.. Nope. I respect those that donate hair, though. It's a good cause.
dude. you totally need to make a JUNK - MICRO - ROCKET MASS HEATER :)
pleasanthacking 3 weeks ago
lol this guy cracks me up everytime i see tese vids
MrToiletface 1 month ago
i love it! i've worked a bit with burning veg oil a while back and found that the secret is that it does not wick like normal lamp oil, so my lamps usually were low pools of oil with a cotton wad in the middle as a sort of mound-wick. however i'm excited to see that you used a cotton rope of some kind - what is it from? and thanks for all your awesome videos and work, i've been very inspired by your projects over the years!!
unstrung13 1 month ago
Why does the stove need an air vent tube from outside the structure? Wouldn't it work the same way with the air pulled from within the structure?
BullittMcQueen1 1 month ago
@BullittMcQueen1
Because combustion requires oxygen and if you burn all the oxygen within the tiny building, you'll suffocate.
rulamdavid 1 month ago
@rulamdavid -- Okay. But I doubt the structure is that air tight.
BullittMcQueen1 1 month ago
sounds good
stubryanfull 2 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Is there a problem with the new YouTube format as I cant get the video to show on my iPhone
syndicate2802 3 months ago
you should use gasoline instead of veggie oil
YouJustGotSquished 4 months ago in playlist More videos from relaxshacksDOTcom
@YouJustGotSquished -- Did your mother have any children who lived?
BullittMcQueen1 1 month ago
since you do alot of work have you ever thought of using a heater called the sawdust stove (youtube it), the short version is you pack the sawdust tightly into a coffee tin with a hole in the middle and and light a small paper fire at teh bottom of the hole, then the heat deaws the air fromt eh bottom creatinga vortex which heats the room.
CaptainDominic 7 months ago
One other heating solution is a toilet paper roll in a coffee can soaked in rubbing alcohol, though I've only seen this for exterior use. FYI, love theTYH videos! Keep up the creations!
dragon887 7 months ago
Use a small rocket stove which emits the heat outside.
r08mars 9 months ago
You look waaaaaaaaay too much like my high school math teacher...
anakinseviltwin 9 months ago
how long should you wait before lighting
madmagicmaster 10 months ago
I had to use a popcorn oil lantern once to see by while fixing a generator. The good part is that burning popcorn oil (has butter flavor) is that your space starts to smell like yummy popcorn! Is good, yes? I thank you for giving me inspiration for a greenhouse for my wife, and a hunting shack for my neighbor.
ayelvington 1 year ago
the other day my friends and I were talking about how you can use your left over bacon grease as fuel for a candle the same way you used vegetable oil as fuel. Have you ever heard of using bacon grease that way? honestly, we end up using our leftover bacon grease for other cooking but if someone ate A LOT of bacon, I guess it would feasibly be a "free" lantern fuel. ~Amanda
GettingThereGreen 1 year ago
would baking sodabe useful for grease fire suppresion ,and would baby food ,dip,and salsa jars could be used instead of cans?
pugcurles 1 year ago
@pugcurles Glass jars and heat don't go - normal glass, like jars are made from, cracks when heated unevenly.
810cars 6 months ago
baking soda for fire suppresion
pugcurles 1 year ago 5
What was the easiest thing you made (house wise)
TheCoolKDM 1 year ago
@1971mgb hit the nail on the head with the clay pot for radiation of the heat. The concept of the outside air for burning is perfect. The only thing I would do different is perhaps make an "air chamber" below the oil can so if there is a grease fire there is an air barer and also a place for any split oil to flow. Simply another coffee can with some wire screen over the top. As you said use at own risk and expand on the idea. The possibilities are endless. Great channel - found you through NPR
chimneswp 1 year ago
Hey Deek,
Don't know if the rocket stove guy understands it but a thermal mass rocket stove is great if you have the space for the mass. Does he even see you are heating 30 sq ft? 3 foot dry saplings?
As a side note a well seasoned clay flower pot radiates the heat far better and more evenly than tin cans when building a small tea light candle or oil wick heater for use in an ultra small cabin.
Robert
thetinybungalow dotcom
1971mgb 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
I enjoy your vids and ideas Deek, and the hair thing is commendable indeed. Gonna grow it back though? The long hair was hawt :] ok, i'm done being shallow, carry on
whorlus 1 year ago
I enjoy your vids and ideas Deek, and the hair thing is commendable indeed. Goona grow it back though? The long hair was hawt :] ok, i'm done being shallow, carry on
whorlus 1 year ago
Have you thought about putting a sm. solar can heater on the side of the shack? You could just go with a fan less set up as not much heat needed. Keep up the good work.
AReptileMan 1 year ago
200 viewer
legolover229 1 year ago
Nice video! Good on ya for donating the hair to such a worth while cause!
VideoGuyNC 1 year ago
Rocket stoves are extremely efficient and effective in heating small spaces and best of all, you can use them for cooking. Tons of models, check out the related videos:
6 brick rocket stove in Africa: /watch?v=vJ7WjwAqeX0
16 brick rocket stove: /watch?v=XSMR2ANIZ7E
nested cans and a chimney: /watch?v=Vblt_kcebdA
MrFinger8r 1 year ago
I applaud your efforts but it's really a gawmey conglomeration of poorly thought out bits. Much better to make a 6 to 16 brick (which you can make by hand out of cob) rocket stove, wrap it in cob and run a chimney outside. That way you don't need industrial civ to provide veggie oil and instead can use small diameter sticks of wood that you can gather anywhere from the woods around you. All that cob becomes thermal mass to reradiate the heat.
MrFinger8r 1 year ago
@MrFinger8r Hey, no offence taken, although you seem a little harsh. I'm not sure what you mean by "gawmey"- I don't think that's even a word. Anyway- very familiar with rocket stoves- the prob with burning "small sticks"- you're feeding the fire every twenty minutes. To combat that you can build a more sizeable stove, but then it defeats this videos goal of small, salvage-junk-built stove. All in all, I self-mentioned many shortcoming of this idea, so I appreciate the input!
relaxshacksDOTcom 1 year ago 15
@relaxshacksDOTcom LOL, yeah gawmey is a local word, guess ya gotta be from Maine where everyone knows it, and I didn't intend harsh at all, if that's what came thru, sorry dude. It's the inadequacy of text to convey emotion accurately. My bad. :)
No was just saying, clearly you spent a lot of engineering time thinking about it. And hey, the Inuit used to heat an entire igloo with a few teardrop shaped oil lamps, so there is a rich ancestry behind your idea. (cont'd)
MrFinger8r 1 year ago
one of the cool things about rocket stoves is to make the feed tube vertical so it becomes gravity fed, put 3 foot dry saplings in and they burn down over time so you're not throwing stuff in every 15 minutes. But if you are already aware of those, then nuthin new here. Thanks for what you are doing and for sharing it. :-)
MrFinger8r 1 year ago
@relaxshacksDOTcom @MrFinger8r You guys are all wasteful in your ideas of a stove, why not a bunch of heavy blankets to keep your selves warm. Im building a 4x8 cabin thats 7 1/2 ft tall. I will send you both a video of, to show you guys.
guitargeek1122 4 months ago
@guitargeek1122 -- Blankets? He is trying to heat a space not just keep a person warm.
BullittMcQueen1 1 month ago
deek, how 'bout telling us the before and after temperature of the shack to get a feel for its heat. and damn boy, 1st time ever your hair is shorter than mine!!
pfcheddar 1 year ago
How about riveting some fins onto the outside enclosure to radiate more of the heat into the shack?
GIJoeBob 1 year ago
Why not incorporate a smaller version of this simple solar heater built from recycled scrap? watch?v=hOCRYB3Y3kE
depro9 1 year ago
how much will the reversioned book be?
technosasquatch 1 year ago
awesome.
toda149 1 year ago
My hair touches my calves. I get asked about donating it every day I go somewhere.. Nope. I respect those that donate hair, though. It's a good cause.
Jallandhara 1 year ago
thanks I was waiting for this.
MimiZ914 1 year ago
Ahh who is the guy at 01:08??!?!?
ig33ku 1 year ago
Comment removed
ig33ku 1 year ago
Deek, how do you feel about using a buddy burner in this?
otakop67 1 year ago