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woodman wrote:
Interisting pocket rocket.
My books, movies, videos, podcasts, events ... the big collection of paul wheaton stuff!
woodman wrote:
Interisting pocket rocket.
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paul wheaton wrote:
Erica,
This is the thread (I think) for the exhaust radiator idea.
paul wheaton wrote:
I'm thinking that this should be for a design with a combustion chamber ONLY (so the pocket rocket designs are out).
paul wheaton wrote:
My thinking is to have a moderately light wood feed and combustion chamber and that there would be no thermal mass bench. Instead, there would be exposed exhaust pipe that would go back and forth and then out the chimney. Granted, it will not go UP the chimney unless the fire is currently pushing it up. But at the exit point, the air should be slightly warmer than room temp. 100 degrees F? It might still rise, but I would like the safety of a dryer vent one-way-thing-a-ma-jig just to be sure.
paul wheaton wrote:
So! there should be zero creosote problems.
paul wheaton wrote:
The system would be far more like dealing with a dryer vent than like dealing with a wood stove. After all, how warm is the air exiting the dryer?
paul wheaton wrote:
This would have to be a six inch system. How hot is the air hitting the top of the barrel? How hot is the air leaving the barrel? Pehaps things should be done with the barrel to focus the most heat exiting from the barrel before going into the first bit of duct?
paul wheaton wrote:
But - the important thing is that we now have push. And we push our exhaust through, say, five feet of pipe before it does a 180. And then another five feet and another 180. Maybe do this three times before heading to the chimney.
Pictures!...(omitted)
My thinking is that the bottom pipe will, indeed, get really, really hot. So some insulation under it would be wise. But the important thing for this idea is that hardly any heat goes out the chimney. A smaller fire using much less wood would throw off far more heat. And what goes out the chimney will be far cleaner.
Pulling numbers out of my ass: I would guess that this would be 100 times cleaner and 20 times more heat efficient than a fireplace without this contraption.
Of course, adding mass to it would make it far better still by keeping the room warm between burns. In fact, I suspect that a small fire will make the room too hot. And once the fire is out, the room will get really cold, really fast.
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Not sure why you'd want to spend that much on high-grade stovepipe, and fireproof attachments, yet skip the thermal mass.
Without the heat-exchanger you're looking at the same basic problem. How to burn a small enough fire, slow enough, to produce warmth instead of hot/cold flashes, and how to do it without being a 24/7 fire-keeper.
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paul wheaton wrote:
1) Because we may be nervous about how much weight the floor can hold.
2) We may be wanting to demonstrate all this and not do a permanent installation.
3) We may be renting and want to have a light impact. We also wanna take this with us when we go.
4) We want to demonstrate the value of it and then evolve to including mass.
...
I once lived in a house with 11 people. We kept the thermostat set at 50. And then we built a fire in the little wood stove insert every other night and got that one room up to 70 or 80 for an hour or two. We would gather around the fire and warm up. Sometimes some folks would play music.
As I visit conventional homes and people ask me how they can be more efficient, I have to admit that it is a challenge. The floor is not very strong and they don't have a lot of time. In the meantime, they are burning huge amounts of wood and putting a lot of heat and smoke out their chimney. It seems like a stepping stone would be a great help.
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1) Being nervous about the floor does no good. Be informed.
2) Great idea: Demonstration - OUTDOORS
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jpwood wrote:
And when trying to describe an RMH, they let 90% of it go by and then they inevitably say "so ... like ... ya know ... okay ... so ... fer twenty bucks what kin I do with this fireplace?"
I want to describe something that will safely work and then describe that this would be a "rocket radiator" - a massive improvement, but the RMH would be better. But an RMH would require shoring up their floor because it would be so heavy.
I wanna demo it indoors. I wanna have a solution for indoors that is better than the fireplace alone. I think that the rocket radiator solution would be about 100 times cleaner and about 20 times more efficient than a typical fireplace. And would be a stepping stone to a RMH.
I have found a lot of folks that are interested in trying it, but the weight of the mass is the turnoff. Nearly all of these folks have a fireplace sitting there unused 99% of the winter. They have access to a fair amount of wood, but they worry about smoke and it just doesn't seem like they get much heat out of the wood. An insert is too expensive.
I think "the rocket radiator" is worth trying. Yes, I agree, that the first one would be better for a garage or shop or something. But after that, I think that it could be ready for inside of a home. And if it is a bad idea for inside of a home, I would like to understand why.
My first thoughts are:
A) the exhaust does not go up the chimney well enough. If this concern is still standing, I would really like to talk about this more. As is, i would think that if it is 50 degrees or colder outside and the exhaust is 70 to 100 degrees, then the exhaust would still go up the chimney and cold air would come down the chimney to replace the warmer exhaust.
B) The part that first exits the barrel is too hot for the floor. I do think that this area needs some work. Maybe part of this part is that there needs to be a wooden trough layered in foil and filled with an inch of perlite and then several inches of sand. Not enough weight to stress any floor. And then there is also a wee bit of mass!
C) Not up to code. Well, yes, that code stuff keeps getting in the way of lots of innovation. And this would be something that can be tried only by the most secret folks until it can get worked into code. And it is just as much not up to code as a RMH.
D) what did I leave out?
I think the important thing with this idea is that it is ten times more in the realm of "doable" for most people. And once they get their heads wrapped around it, then they can understand why the RMH is better and worth the effort.
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Oooh, I like point-and-shoot bullet headings!
Having said all that, Ernie would like to try it. Outdoors. Just for fun.
But I'm not buying the stovepipe, and I have the checkbook.
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Erica Wisner wrote:
I think the American public would benefit greatly from more freedom to do their own thing, including the freedom to take the consequences. You can build not-to-code things in your own home, and I might even help. But just because I believe in your right to burn down your house, doesn't mean I think it's a good idea.
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Wytze Schouten wrote:
Well folks, I have been experimenting with different configurations inside the fireplace shown in my previous post.
Just as a reminded, the objective is to have a modest rocket mass heater and leave room for a regular touch-the-wood-and-see-the-flames open fireplace.
Attachments to chimney: don't work
To begin with, all attempts at taking the air from the rocket heater's chimney and trying to push it back down through some sort of brick channel... failed. Maybe it was because I piled up the firebricks without sealing the cracks, so the chimney might have been less hot than it would in a final version.
Wytze Schouten wrote:
Plain J-tube setup: works okay
Second batch of attempts, I decided to go with a model where the rocket heater's chimney would simply end after about a meter (3 feet) and let the air go up into the fireplace chimney. That seemed to work a lot better. A simple J-tube in this setup worked fine.
The nice part of this setup, for my purposes, is that you can use the J-tube as the floor for a regular open fireplace. If other experiments (see below) don't work, I could put in three adjacent J-tubes, each with its feed towards the room and its chimney against the fireplace back wall, and have an open fireplace (fireback and all) sit on top of the three horizontal parts.
+ The heat radiation up from the J-tubes would do a lot for the efficiency of the open fire, as a bonus.
- Three J-tubes and an open fire require a lot of air. I would need to channel that from elsewhere. But I should really be doing that already anyway.
Wytze Schouten wrote:
Winding fire tunnel: might work
Finally I found a great example on YouTube of a Finnish rocket mass "floor" heater. Basically, this extends the horizontal part of the J-tube into a small maze before the air goes up the chimney. So long as the chimney is free-standing (i.e. you don't push the exhaust back down into a barrel or anything else), this ought to work.
When I tried this, it sorta worked and sorta didn't. Using the really tiny size burn tunnel in the video was a no-no. That may work in the open air when it's windy, like in the video, but not inside a fireplace in a home. I had to increase the tunnel size to a diameter of 3/4 by 1/2 of a flat brick.
Also, I tried to make the chimney as wide and non-deep as possible (i.e. not square, not round, but rectangular in diameter) to have a maximum surface area to absorb the exhaust heat. Again, reducing any dimension of to below 1/2 flat brick (say, 4 inches) will not give enough draft.
I got stuck at this point for lack of good dry fuel. Also, an alternative for this whole project appeared when a lot of Googling finally led me to the Lorflam and Polyflam systems. Both are French systems which allows you to have a hidden woodstove in a stone mass below a regular open fireplace. That basically solves my dilemma of wanting more firepower without losing the open fireplace's charm.
I may do a little more experimenting with the mass heater concept before the Lorflam or Polyflam is installed (if we can get those French folks to come all the way here to install one). If anyone is interested, just give me a buzz on this forum.
New Jersey, zone 7a
Annual rainfall 46"
Success has a Thousand Fathers , Failure is an Orphan
LOOK AT THE " SIMILAR THREADS " BELOW !
Erica Wisner wrote:Ernie suggests a Pocket Rocket like the one on pp. 76-77 of the Rocket Mass Heaters book. (www.rocketstoves.com) Sminfiddle suggested something similar toward the end of his ideas - like he said, it's not the prettiest thing ever, but it's neat.
You can make a small one from a 5-gallon bucket and 2 pieces of scrap stovepipe, and get a lot of radiant heat. The fire is concentrated near the bottom so you get more of the warmth. Fun project, fuel-efficient, quick heat in the evenings, and gives you practice operating a J-tube rocket stove if you want to build one later.
North America, Zone 7
1600+ chill hrs avg / yr.
45" annual rainfall
Success has a Thousand Fathers , Failure is an Orphan
LOOK AT THE " SIMILAR THREADS " BELOW !
allen lumley wrote:
After you have made one and used it out of doors, you will quickly find out why it is recommended for out door use only, Having said that they are very handy
things to have in a back corner of your Garage/ down cellar when mother nature ''takes you off grid''! Go for it ! For the good of the Craft!
North America, Zone 7
1600+ chill hrs avg / yr.
45" annual rainfall
God of procrastination https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1EoT9sedqY
Satamax Antone wrote:Rob, show us a picture of your fireplace, and inside the chimney opening, looking up.
I'm pretty sure something can be done, if big enough. But, without a pic, i can't tell much. A sketch with dimensions could be cool too.
Hth.
Max.
North America, Zone 7
1600+ chill hrs avg / yr.
45" annual rainfall
God of procrastination https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1EoT9sedqY
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