Julia Winter wrote:OK, so the stainless steel coil is overpriced. Agreed. However, now I'd like to hear how to expose the copper coil (or wort chilling coils - those seem like a decent middle ground) to the heat of a rocket stove in a safe way.
I have no need for a pressurized system: I'm hoping to heat water in an insulated tub to maybe 110 degree Fahrenheit, with something that is more efficient than the "snorkel" wood stoves that are out there. This is an outdoors application.
Julia,
I wanted to give this some thought before I replied. Sorry for the delay. Copper melts at over 1900F. You are going to be hard pressed to melt copper without direct contact to the flame or chimney. The joints are a different issue. Flux will melt around 800, so keep fixtures/transitions away from direct heat. Water is steam at 212F obviously, if you are regulating combustion to keep water around 100F, you should not have a problem. Don't plumb in any valves or restrictors.
To answer your question: I would use a rocket mass stove concept. Just as you are heating the mass to radiate over time, the pipe can run into the thermal mass and absorb the heat you require without direct contact with the chimney or getting to hot. Also, since a rocket stove burns quickly and cleanly with smaller masses of fuel, if it gets too hot you can alway cut off air or pull fuel from the burn box, so temps in the pipe stay down below steam level. I figure if you can sit on a cob bench warmed from the heat of a chimney without burning one's self; one can plumb the pipe as to not over heat. I assure you, your bum has a much lower melting point than copper.
(As Alex suggested) A bucket of sand with a chimney up the center and the wort cooler suspended in the sand a few inches from the chimney will work fine. when the water gets to the temp you want, kill the combustion and let the sand maintain the water temp. If both ends of the pipe are free flowing you will get a siphon effect. Fine tuning for the right temperature range will be trial and error, I am afraid.
To make your own copper pipe without purchasing a wort chiller, a conduit bender is an option. Chose the radius you want and bend. Advance the pipe a few inches and bend the same angle. Slight lateral pressure while bending will get you a coil instead of concentric circles. Refrigerator tubing is small diameter and thin walled, so fairly cheap. You could do a small scale model for not a lot of money if you wanted to be sure the water would not over heat.