Life on a farm is a school of patience; you can't hurry the crops or make an ox in two days.
Henri Alain
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
-Robert A. Heinlein
Glenn Herbert wrote:Nice experiment. What this can best be compared to is an L-tube, rather than a J-tube. For your long bamboo feedstock, it makes sense. A fully functional rocket core doesn't have any coals to remove, just mineral ash, and a tiny amount of that that needs removal only every few days. Have you ever built a by-the-book J-tube, to have a baseline to compare your experiments with?
Life on a farm is a school of patience; you can't hurry the crops or make an ox in two days.
Henri Alain
Chris Kott wrote:I think you'd get a more complete burn if you closed one arm of the T. The draught will pull harder through the remaining arm, but it will keep more of its heat, burning everything to mineral ash and obviating the necessity for a cleanout.
-CK
Life on a farm is a school of patience; you can't hurry the crops or make an ox in two days.
Henri Alain
Glenn Herbert wrote:Another way to accomplish balancing the draft would be to make both lower channels half the height of the riser width. You could still push the long fuel through, but you would get the concentrated flow.
Or you could do what I have done in two rocket L-tube cores, and make the horizontal leg at least 2 1/2 feet long, to allow a long flame path on the fuel, reaching very high temperatures and completely consuming the fuel. In numerous wood-fired cob pottery kilns I have built, I have found that the best results had a horizontal firebox over 4 feet long.
Life on a farm is a school of patience; you can't hurry the crops or make an ox in two days.
Henri Alain
Mart Hale wrote:
Glenn Herbert wrote:Another way to accomplish balancing the draft would be to make both lower channels half the height of the riser width. You could still push the long fuel through, but you would get the concentrated flow.
Or you could do what I have done in two rocket L-tube cores, and make the horizontal leg at least 2 1/2 feet long, to allow a long flame path on the fuel, reaching very high temperatures and completely consuming the fuel. In numerous wood-fired cob pottery kilns I have built, I have found that the best results had a horizontal firebox over 4 feet long.
Yes a square pipe on the bottom heating the air and feeding heated oxygen the fury of the chimney just like Peter Van's design with a batch box.
Life on a farm is a school of patience; you can't hurry the crops or make an ox in two days.
Henri Alain
Glenn Herbert wrote:Another way to accomplish balancing the draft would be to make both lower channels half the height of the riser width. You could still push the long fuel through, but you would get the concentrated flow.
Or you could do what I have done in two rocket L-tube cores, and make the horizontal leg at least 2 1/2 feet long, to allow a long flame path on the fuel, reaching very high temperatures and completely consuming the fuel. In numerous wood-fired cob pottery kilns I have built, I have found that the best results had a horizontal firebox over 4 feet long.
Life on a farm is a school of patience; you can't hurry the crops or make an ox in two days.
Henri Alain
Glenn Herbert wrote:A J-tube has a vertical feed; an L-tube has the horizontal feed like yours. A J-tube can only safely use fuel cut to a length that fits inside the feed tube (when you are outdoors this is less important), while an L-tube can be much longer and take longer fuel.
An outdoor core and mass with air or liquid to move the heat to indoors will have very large conversion and transport losses. If you are depending on it for serious, long-term heating, there are much more effective and efficient ways. If you just want occasional supplemental heating, it may work for you.
Life on a farm is a school of patience; you can't hurry the crops or make an ox in two days.
Henri Alain
I miss the old days when I would think up a sinister scheme for world domination and you would show a little emotional support. So just look at this tiny ad:
Heat your home with the twigs that naturally fall of the trees in your yard
http://woodheat.net
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