frank gra

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since Aug 08, 2014
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Ok, I think I am getting closer. This guy build this stove. The firebox is bigger and cob insulated. He is burning multiple pieces of bigger wood. But the heat from those pieces is being choked down to a smaller flame path and focused, in what lookes to be a standard size rocket mass heater. He is controlling how much heat is being funneled down into the heater by controling how much air goes into the big firebox. The wood he is burning is the same size of what I burn in my wood stove.

It looks like there is more ash up front than in a normal rocket mass stove. I'll bet that is because of the logs being burned in a box with slower relative air flow and less heat. And I guess that is similar to the hybrid we have already seen. So, it is a trade off. Probably a trade off I can live with in order to avoid splitting wood down 5 times as small.

Let me know what you guys think about all of this.


Here is his video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2sFParAFEc
10 years ago

allen lumley wrote:Frank G. : A suggestion; google '' High Temperature Hydrogen Attack '' to understand why you can not just add cob or insulation to the outside of a iron box type
Wood Stove !

Adding additional High Temp Firebrick to the inside of one of these wood stoves quickly chokes down the interior area to the point that you are right back at a too
small Combustion zone and you will be spending too much time feeding your Franken-Stove in order to get any amount of space heating !

Hope this helps and is timely ! Big AL !




Dang. That looks like a bad thing to do to a piece of metal. Oh well. Better for me to learn this way instead of building one and having it break all up. Thanks.
10 years ago

Mike Cantrell wrote:Short answer: go search "masonry stove" "masonry heater" "Russian stove" and "Russian heater".


Long answer: The need for small splits isn't about moisture content, but about air contact. If you've got just one fat piece of wood in your feed hole, then the air can only touch the outside surface, and the wood can only burn on the outside surface. If you split the same piece into four pieces, then think about how much more surface area it has.



Huh, I had that part wrong. It's a good thing I asked. Thanks for the info, it's a very important difference.
10 years ago
My house is bigger than the average house. I'll need a bigger stove, maybe. I have room to put in a lot more thermal mass. But it sounds like the typical rocket mass heater is already using just about all of the available heat. So I would need either a bigger fire to support the bigger thermal mass, or I would have to run it longer. I'd rather not baby sit it.


I have 5 cords of wood out there that I was going to burn in my normal woodstove. If I build a rocket mass stove I could burn it in that instead. Except the wood is all split to normal size. 1 stick would fit in a feed tube. It seems important to get the wood split down small not because of the feed tube size but rather to make it burn properly. *I am guessing* that the reason is that if the wood is not split down small enough it will not be as dry. If the wood is not as dry it will not burn hot enough to get a secondary burn going and the efficiency is lost. Even with the batch feeders it seems like the wood has to be split down smaller. I am wondering if more insulation and a longer burn tube would jack up the temperatures inside the tube causing a secondary burn even if the original temperatures are not as high. We have 10 food ceilings and a concrete floor, I have a lot of options. I wouldn't mind spending more money to create a stove that takes normal firewood but burns with rocket stove efficiency.


At this point one idea I have (it's just an idea at this point) is to take a normal wood stove and insulate/cover it with cob as much as possible to turn all of the heat back in on itself. Plug that into a long heavily insulated burn tube. Plug that into a long heavily insulated heat riser. The idea is that it would take longer to get warmed up and going, but it might burn bigger pieces of wood with the same efficiency since the added insulation would focus the heat more. So it would take less heat to cause the secondary burn, in theory.

I have a tractor and the ground is all good clay. So I can make whatever I want really.

Thoughts?
10 years ago
Hi!
I've been planning to replace my indoor woodstove with a cob woodstove. In researching it I came across this site and signed up, it seems perfect for learning what I'm researching. The whole goal behind me wanting to build a cob stove is so that I can put in a lot more wood and have the cob hold the heat. That way I get up in the morning to a stove that is still warm and has some coals left, instead of a cold dead stove like what I have now. Then I came across the idea of a rocket stove mass heater. I like the idea of using less wood, but I don't like the idea of having to feed it all the time since it has to run full blast. So I'm wondering if there is already a solution somebody can point me to instead of me taking a week to come to the same conclusion.
Great site btw.

Thanks!
10 years ago