I think there are a lot of concepts at work here, I'd try putting aluminum foil wrapped around the top to seal the can within a can, see if it works any better, then I think the idea of putting it in a box with a blower is interesting, maybe try increasing or decreasing fan speed to see if you can have more control over the burn and flames. Box w blower exhaust open bottom and place stove beneath... Maybe I'll try something like that... Portable outside on a stand...heat exchanger...
Incoming air rushes past the side of the fire bed and draws fresh air through the firebed tyaking gases out, the wood gases and fresh air igniting at the exhaust at the top of the stove. I've been playing with similar myself and either have the problem of needing to tend the fire too much or the fire becomes too fierce after much building up. I think the main problem is the metal cans, the stove loses tooo much heat outdoors unless the wood is very dry and chunky. Have you made progress?
At 4:10 you see that the wood is making the fire there. That makes it a wood stove, not a wood gas stove.
Also, I love how you overlook the perfectly good tactical survival S.A.S. combat stealth oven and just use it to burn some wood in a can. Go to your back yard or some other perilous local to demonstrate your.. um.. can.
In a survival situation, 97.875% (repeating of course) of survivors would burn wood in a pile.
I await your video of mac n' cheese combat microwaved field rations.
The lid only attempts to cover the fact that you did it wrong.
If it was a gassifier the flames would not be so red-orange.
If you build a more typical version of a gassifier to learn how it works first instead of one of these 'it's bound to make fire' ones you will get more educational benefit out of it.
Try this, take a small amount of wood, wrap tightly in aluminum foil so air can't get in. Poke small hole for gas to escape. Put on a heat source and light the gas that comes off.
two words... Carbon Monoxide. Although I think your stove is a nice creation, I see the danger in burning wood inside of your home. Not preaching to you I just hope you stay safe. I will say this, you gave me an idea for a family camping wood power oven. Please be safe, use your wood stove outside in conditions that will be out on the trail. It is a good working stove from what I could see, and a unique sort of idea.
my oven has is a build in one with an air suction thing, plus i open my windows ánd put on the range hood(dunno if its the correct word, its from a translation site) from my kitchen
So i probably have less CO in my appartment's air then someone who smokes with closed windows.
I think there are a lot of concepts at work here, I'd try putting aluminum foil wrapped around the top to seal the can within a can, see if it works any better, then I think the idea of putting it in a box with a blower is interesting, maybe try increasing or decreasing fan speed to see if you can have more control over the burn and flames. Box w blower exhaust open bottom and place stove beneath... Maybe I'll try something like that... Portable outside on a stand...heat exchanger...
notoriouslizw 11 months ago
Incoming air rushes past the side of the fire bed and draws fresh air through the firebed tyaking gases out, the wood gases and fresh air igniting at the exhaust at the top of the stove. I've been playing with similar myself and either have the problem of needing to tend the fire too much or the fire becomes too fierce after much building up. I think the main problem is the metal cans, the stove loses tooo much heat outdoors unless the wood is very dry and chunky. Have you made progress?
TheBeebopper 2 years ago
nah, i made the conclusion that it wasn't very practical and left it at that
nephildevil 2 years ago
At 4:10 you see that the wood is making the fire there. That makes it a wood stove, not a wood gas stove.
Also, I love how you overlook the perfectly good tactical survival S.A.S. combat stealth oven and just use it to burn some wood in a can. Go to your back yard or some other perilous local to demonstrate your.. um.. can.
In a survival situation, 97.875% (repeating of course) of survivors would burn wood in a pile.
I await your video of mac n' cheese combat microwaved field rations.
buckstarchaser 2 years ago
it needs the lid to work, dumbass
so bent on trolling,
u totally miss the point of the whole mechanism
nephildevil 2 years ago
The lid only attempts to cover the fact that you did it wrong.
If it was a gassifier the flames would not be so red-orange.
If you build a more typical version of a gassifier to learn how it works first instead of one of these 'it's bound to make fire' ones you will get more educational benefit out of it.
Try this, take a small amount of wood, wrap tightly in aluminum foil so air can't get in. Poke small hole for gas to escape. Put on a heat source and light the gas that comes off.
buckstarchaser 2 years ago
two words... Carbon Monoxide. Although I think your stove is a nice creation, I see the danger in burning wood inside of your home. Not preaching to you I just hope you stay safe. I will say this, you gave me an idea for a family camping wood power oven. Please be safe, use your wood stove outside in conditions that will be out on the trail. It is a good working stove from what I could see, and a unique sort of idea.
NCHiker1970 2 years ago
i know about CO
my oven has is a build in one with an air suction thing, plus i open my windows ánd put on the range hood(dunno if its the correct word, its from a translation site) from my kitchen
So i probably have less CO in my appartment's air then someone who smokes with closed windows.
nephildevil 2 years ago
smokes cigarettes i mean
nephildevil 2 years ago
most of the burning gas is carbon monoxide.
snookmeister6 2 years ago