Howard Hoffman wrote:Hello Scott- I looked through all the Uncle Mudd videos I could find. I have for years seen the cobb benches for mass heaters and also for the Liberator which I have something like. I didn't really see any videos doing something like I want to do which is without a bench or wall somehow get more heat retention from my heater. At present as long as you are burning it you have heat but when fire goes out or down the cool down in house is almost instant, at least very quickly. In looking at my situation I can put something on the round top of the stove. I was thinking maybe a stack of regular old bricks. I am not a scientist but remembered years ago people would put warmed up bricks at the foot of their bed so maybe this would hold the heat or maybe I should try to build a cobb barrel on top of the heater. I have a good 4 feet below ceiling to catch or retain the heat. If you see a particular video I have missed with something directly on top of the stove if could could maybe post a link as I have never seen anyone do what I am asking about.
Hi Howard, you could pull the stove a bit away from the wall and build a pretty massive heat bank by both pouring a
concrete slab for it to sit on and putting brick in back of it (multiple rows). You would get the heat from the pipe going through it but given the proximity to the back of the stove would really soak up the heat, the canister portion gets incredibly hot as it burns the
wood gas.