 It's amazing how little fuel it took. This part here is really hot, obviously. This is the heat dissipator. This is the burning chamber. The wood goes in here. You remove this to light it. Let me have some more sticks there. Yeah. Put small sticks in there for now. Small sticks. Is that a small stick? I'll wash your hands sometime. Put sticks in there. The fire burns. Right down here in the bottom, the heat and smoke go this way. There's another one of these tubes in the middle here. So the heat, the draft pulls the heat in there this way. As you can see, there's no heat or smoke coming out this part, because the draft is pulling in. The air is coming in here. Fire is burning in this chamber. The draft is pulling in. The very strong draft is pulling it this way. There's another tube inside this cylinder, another tube like this inside this cylinder. So the smoke and heat come in, go up, go around the sides, and then out this exhaust, and then out the flue. The Liberty Rocket Wood Burning Stove. Super efficient, small pieces of wood burn. Small amount of heat, I mean a small amount of fuel, produces a huge amount of heat. Terribly efficient. The heat is radiated from this chamber here. Very small amount of heat, I mean very small amount of fuel heats my entire house, demonstrates how high it gets. Two gallon stainless steel bucket sitting on top. The chamber is not terribly hot yet, but it will be very soon. This part right here is very hot, way too hot to touch. The Liberty Rocket Stove is made out of steel, it's not made out of cast iron, like your old wood stoves, instead it's made out of steel. If you want to slow down the burn rate, you can put this top on, the air intake, leaving us some air, the Liberty Stove gets very hot with a very small amount of wood. Here we're just burning sticks from yard waste, this thing here is already too hot to touch. This is the heat dissipator, the heat comes out here and yet there's still a very good draft to go up, it has a very very strong draft. We're starting off with some sticks here, and then tonight we're going to try burning some charcoal, yeah more, better the more now, yeah go ahead and fill her up. Now that we've got a hot fire started here, we're going to see how it works with this Duraflame, burns over two hours Duraflame log, okay it's beginning to burn real hot here now with that Duralog in it, so I'm going to slow it down a little bit by putting the cap on. The lid slowed the burning down too much and so I took it off so it could get air and start up again. Even though the Duraflame log is burning and flaming, because of the draft pulling downward and outward, there's still no smoke coming out here. It's all going downward and through the heat exchanger. I was getting a little smoke coming out of here while the paper on the Duralog was lighting, but now that it's lit, the fire is going good, the Duralog is lit well, again I'm not getting any smoke coming out of here, all the smoke is in the heat is going, being pulled downward like it should be. That's the Duralog flame, or Duraflame log, beginning to glow red hot here, red hot, so I'll put the cap on to slow the burn rate down. Even though the stove is burning red hot, the reclaimer still hasn't turned on, thermostatically controlled and this part of the flue is warm, but it's not so hot that I can't touch it. Most of the heat is being dissipated by the dissipator there, that I have a very, very strong draft going up. This part here is very hot, but I can still touch it. So there's enough heat that goes through that produces a very strong draft, yet most of the heat is dissipated by this part here. So this stove is very, very efficient in that most of the heat that it produces is dissipated through this cylinder here, as opposed to losing the heat of the flue. When you put this lid on it shuts the fire down completely, completely shuts it off, put it on at an angle like that allows some air through, then it burns, but not quite as fast. You can see why they call it a rocket stove. It burns like a rocket, sounds like one too, the Duralog burnt completely up. So what is my overall evaluation of this Liberty Rocket Heater? Overall, I give it a thumbs up. What I like about it is it's very efficient. You can burn waste products like sticks that you collect from your yard, scrap boards, little pieces of wood. You can burn it and burn it very efficiently and produce a lot of heat with a very small amount of fuel. The downside of the Rocket Heater, as I see it, is you can't burn the large logs that you normally burn in your fireplace. They just won't fit in the unit. Also you have to feed it often, unlike your fireplace where you can just put a large amount of wood in it and let it burn for a while. You do have to, not continuously but pretty much frequently, you have to add fuel to the Rocket Heater. Overall though, I like the Rocket Heater. It's very efficient. I believe it is an asset for us preppers and so I give it a thumbs up. This is Survival Doc reminding you to be prepared or be prepared to be fleeced.