"The best fertilizer is the gardener's shadow"
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Jay Angler wrote:What would be the benefit of a "pot stand-off" on this sort of cob stove?
I understand that on a gas stove, the stand off makes sure that the flame isn't smothered. But I thought a rocket stove like this one, would have the air intake near the bottom, not at the pot height?
I also thought from looking at the Lorena they made at Wheaton Labs, that part of the point was to have the heat around the pot sides part way up to increase it's ability to absorb heat quickly - the same idea as a "pot skirt"?
"The best fertilizer is the gardener's shadow"
Anonymous Agrarian Blog
Fox James wrote:Yes that is what I though, without a pot stand, if you place a pot over the riser, the fire will just go out!
"The best fertilizer is the gardener's shadow"
Anonymous Agrarian Blog
OK, so could the skirt be effectively an extension of the "chimney" so long as the gap between the pot and the skirt maintained the equivalent (or slightly larger) cross sectional area? (Area of the skirt cross section minus the area of the pot cross section.)Ezra Beaton wrote: Also as Jay Angler pointed out a skirt of some kind would increase efficiency as well to keep the hot gases against the body of the pot longer and prevent cross-winds from blowing under the pot. If a pot-skirt was introduced to this system I have a feeling you would need very little fuel to boil a decent pot. My version of this was completely out in the open in the wind and I managed to keep a 3 gallon pot of water boiling for a few hours on one firewood round split down (my intent was to have an easy solution to doing canning outside), adding a skirt to keep the wind off would've increased efficiency massively.
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Jay Angler wrote:
OK, so could the skirt be effectively an extension of the "chimney" so long as the gap between the pot and the skirt maintained the equivalent (or slightly larger) cross sectional area? (Area of the skirt cross section minus the area of the pot cross section.)Ezra Beaton wrote: Also as Jay Angler pointed out a skirt of some kind would increase efficiency as well to keep the hot gases against the body of the pot longer and prevent cross-winds from blowing under the pot. If a pot-skirt was introduced to this system I have a feeling you would need very little fuel to boil a decent pot. My version of this was completely out in the open in the wind and I managed to keep a 3 gallon pot of water boiling for a few hours on one firewood round split down (my intent was to have an easy solution to doing canning outside), adding a skirt to keep the wind off would've increased efficiency massively.
You'd still need a large enough pot stand to allow the fire exhaust to exit the riser, then it would enter the skirt which is acting as a chimney, and then exit the gap between the pot and the top of the skirt?
Any guess at what the exhaust temps would be at that point? I'm thinking in terms of either my canning kettle or a large metal garbage can which I use for scalding birds for plucking. My current system is both inadequate, a PITA,* and quite frankly, more dangerous than I would like. However, my canning kettle has handles and although I wouldn't make the skirt go that high, things have to be cool enough not to damage them.
*pain in the ass
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Anonymous Agrarian Blog
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