@morav Traditionally they used dry soil to put out fires. coal had to be bone dry of the furnaces couldn't use it. I imagine you could experiment with using water and all will be fine but if you want to go 100% traditional, only soil.
I think it was a great move posting this video where there were some problems, and being able to walk the viewer through the process. Very instructive, thanks!
I love watching your kids shovel. Haha.. you'd be there all day with those two. This must make an impressive amount of charcoal. Wish I had a ton of land to do this kinda thing. This is NOT your average suburbs project.
What if you sprayed the outside with water? Would that slow down the burning?
morav 4 months ago
@morav Traditionally they used dry soil to put out fires. coal had to be bone dry of the furnaces couldn't use it. I imagine you could experiment with using water and all will be fine but if you want to go 100% traditional, only soil.
vanwags 4 months ago
you just got a new subscriber
citys4 8 months ago
very nice idea thank you but i need to watch the part1 first,,,,thank you
drannard123 1 year ago
can you charcoal big round logs about a feet and a half thick/wide?
bigjunior2 2 years ago
I think it was a great move posting this video where there were some problems, and being able to walk the viewer through the process. Very instructive, thanks!
irkone 2 years ago
Thanks so much for this information!! I,m not sure if i will try this but i have a gasification unit that does the same thing in less quanitities.
jcornelius215 2 years ago
lol chicken runs buy heh heh
007001113 3 years ago
I love watching your kids shovel. Haha.. you'd be there all day with those two. This must make an impressive amount of charcoal. Wish I had a ton of land to do this kinda thing. This is NOT your average suburbs project.
viper8red 3 years ago