Matt Walker wrote:Sorry, my first sentence should have said "Two barrels is all that a 6" will drive" with regards to the radiating surface, so as not to cool the exhaust to the point of stalling. Still might be close, but you will have a good chimney so it should work.
The wofati design almost never allows for a good chimney. Rick has worked on two now that were as good as practical, given the restriction that we are not allowed to go through the roof, and there is a deep eave with a 4' or taller facade before you get above the roof/soil surface.
The cold-plug potential for over 12 feet of exposed chimney, half of it at more than 45 degrees from vertical, means any supplemental heater installed in a wofati needs some extra draft, or bells and whistles, to give the operator options in case of a cold start. (The large thermal mass of these structures will help once warm, but create problems until that point. And there have been some gaps in occupancy for various structures.)
Peter van den Berg wrote:
Rick Edwards wrote:After the second barrel, can the exhaust go up to 8" if we have more of that laying around?
Peter. Thanks for the plans, most excellent.
Yes. Chimneys can be larger diameters as the heater, not smaller.
You're welcome, I do sincerely hope it will solve the heating problem.
Peter van den Berg wrote:
Jay C. White Cloud wrote:A chimney within a wood burn system for a given combustion shaber for a given run of horizontal, and Up down radiant passages should fall within certain parameters depending on multiple factors of location, elevation location of build, and general design of system...These chimneys are meant to match the system...definitely not undersized, yet too large will also cause inefficiencies, and/or failures.
Agree. In these specific circumstances I'd think it will work.
We have seen problems in hooking a 6" system (J-type) up to 8" channels. The exhaust tends to become cooler and more sluggish, and may not properly draft out the chimney. I can't be certain if that's the only problem, as many systems with this type of random change will also have several other weird improvisations that could be equally the culprit.
While I would not be surprised if Peter's original design suggestion here would have worked (a single barrel-bell type heat extractor hooked to a simple vertical 8" chimney),
the design that got made was a convoluted path of 8" channels through a huge amount of earthen thermal mass, at about the maximum theoretical length for an 8" J-type firebox.
The convolutions include a vertical drop in 8" channel immediately after the exit from the single barrel.
Matt Walker wrote:Well Peter, you touched on most of my concerns. Insulating all around the flue would go a long way towards alleviating most of my concern, which is that the giant heat sink of the ground around three sides of the flue is going to keep that flue too cool to work well. Condensation and chimney stall will be constant instead of a seasonal hump to get over by warming the mass. Less surface to radiate into the space is another issue. It may work, but I'd be surprised if it isn't a constant battle.
Due to the wofati exhaust and high thermal mass, this is a good thing to keep in mind for any future
heaters.
Cold-start problems / the stove running backwards have been reported by the new couple moving in, and it's been a struggle to get to the point where the whole building is warm enough to help a little with draft. Condensation is still huge - icicles on the chimney joints - and is likely to remain a concern with this and other wofati heaters (heaters with a long, not-entirely-vertical chimney exposed to outdoor cold air).
General design warnings that I feel were missed somewhere in building this project, due to many hands / coming from different directions toward a new experiment:
- Don't cob in the barrel. All functional elements of any appliance or building should be as accessible as possible, especially in the experimental stages, to allow for re-checks and repairs. In masonry heaters, there are rules of thumb (and sometimes codes) that require the heater to be separate from load-bearing walls, and from its own chimney, to facilitate independent repairs of either.
- Down-and-up channels are much more problematic than horizontal ones, and they are different from bells. I think Peter said somewhere a bell is at least 4x the channel size, so there is real stratification without turbulent restrictions.
- Formulae that are worked out for one system (like the approx. max. length and turns of 8" duct on an 8" J-type system, or the approx. surface area required for a bell-type heat extractor on a 6" batch box system) should not be trusted with another system, even if they appear to agree. This pipe layout theoretically follows both Peter's and Ernie's and my formulae, yet is having big problems at current ambient temperatures.
- Adding more mass to a system does not always make it work better. And it makes it more work to take apart in case of problems.
- Each element of the system has a draft function. Know it. If an element must be changed outside the range of proven past success, look for ways to make a compensating change elsewhere.
Each element either adds draft (hot things that go up, cold things that flow down), adds drag (more surface area, sharp turns, textured surfaces), or creates a risk of negative draft (hot things that must be forced downward, cooling things that must be forced upward). The working parts of the system have to balance the load (drag, heat loss, and anti-draft), and be significantly stronger. Engines pulling train cars come to mind - your climate and usage variables represent slopes, and some conditions call for more engines or less freight.
It's important to keep in mind the function of each element under a range of temperature conditions.
Consider what they do for the system both under optimal conditions (warm stove and cold weather), and under bad conditions (cold building, cold chimney, cold stove, exactly the wrong wind direction.
If you will want to heat under those bad conditions (including heating a too-cool house on a warm day), you need a lot more emphasis on the power-ups and a lot less length and surface area and turns to impose drag.
- A bypass which allows a shorter path, chimney pre-heating, and an escape option when the stove just can't push through its entire planned mass, is a longstanding and effective method from masonry heaters.
- Other cold-start options include keeping the chimney right near the barrel for self-priming near the start of the fire without any exhaust bypass as such.
- Even if a bypass does not go straight to a chimney, a shorter path instead of committing to the longer run all the time can be valuable.
The "boomerang" down-and-up seems like the most problematic decision for this particular system, and while I can see all the reasons that
led up to it, the reasons may also be part of the problem.
I would really like to see wofati heaters (and anywhere you're considering a through-wall exhaust) only installed on the wall through which their exhaust will be ported.
No big horizontal spans through the ceiling, no convoluted horizontal runs through the floor.
Going without a proper, vertical chimney is not an option for batch boxes, nor for large, tall buildings that can structurally act as a wind scoop from multiple directions depending on the weather.
Those are my initial thoughts so far on seeing this system.
We all think that the cold start sluggishness will improve dramatically as the building is occupied, heated, and more of the air leaks and drafts are sealed.
Once those are resolved, we'll see how the rest of it works.
I'm recording these thoughts here for general reference, and in case there is a repeat of someone moving into this structure while it's this cold. (-9 F several times this week.)
I imagine the situation will have several more patches and changes before all's said and done.
Maybe Matt or Peter will have suggestions for a quick fix. Maybe they already made them (I'm afraid I am only up to page 2 so far).
From just looking at the site itself, Ernie was leaning toward a bypass from the cap before the boomerang starts, directly to the exit chimney, to allow heating up the space and drying out the chimney before attempting to heat the floor.
- I would also routinely check any trap-like areas to remove condensation until the whole floor is quite warm. There's a possibility that enough water could build up in the floor to actually block the pipes.
- We have a document that is a fill-in-the-blanks owner manual for rocket stoves, on our
Scubbly store.
I think this
thread is the current nearest equivalent that exists for this stove. Since I know what I'm reading and I haven't made it through the whole thing in 2 days, I would suggest making a condensed summary that can be passed on to new occupants.
The manual could be a binder with
- the diagrams shown here, or a basic drawing with instructions for how to find the diagrams here,
- operating and maintenance basics (such as how and where to clean out
ash, the normal and maximum fuel loads, and the importance of not blocking the air intake and port),
- performance log and troubleshooting, like cold-start hints (where to clean out accumulated moisture, where to apply extra heat to help kick-start the system draft, weather or other conditions that didn't work out).
All these will be best indicated by people who have worked on and lived with the stove. If nobody involved likes binders, then never mind.
-Erica