For all your Montana Masonry Heater parts (also known as) Rocket Mass heater parts.
Visit me at
dragontechrmh.com Once you go brick you will never go back!
thomas rubino wrote:Hi Ray;
Welcome to Permies!
I'll try to answer your questions for you.
1) No, a J-tube design is better, less prone to burning backward up the feed tube, than a K-design.
2) 6x6" feed tube 16" tall, a 6x6" burn tunnel with a 12" roof, and a 6x6" riser no less than 36" tall.
3) All internal sizing needs to remain the same dia.
4)Steel can be used but will quickly degrade, clay bricks work much better and firebricks are the brick of choice if you can get them.
5 & 6) We have a poster here at Permies that specializes in building Rocket cookers, his name is Fox James.
Here is a link to one of his posts https://permies.com/t/226771/messing-vermiculite
If you click on his name it will take you to his profile and then click on the number of posts under his name, there you will find a list of all his posts.
Fox experiments and builds some outstanding cooking stoves, I am sure you will learn much by reading his posts.
Glenn Herbert wrote:Unless your scrap wood is all straight and smooth, fuel can easily hang up on the edge of a slanted feed tube. So lumber yes, sticks no. A J-tube has less of an issue with this.
To get good combustion with less smoke (desirable regardless of efficiency concerns), you want the flame path long enough that big flames don't reach the top of the riser. A J-tube has a horizontal burn tunnel which increases the flame path for a given riser top height over a K-style. It also has more sharp changes in direction which increase beneficial turbulence.
For J-tube dimensions, I like a 1:1.5:3 ratio measured along the outside edge for feed tube, burn tunnel and riser. You could probably make the feed a bit taller and burn tunnel a bit shorter for cookstove use.
As a long steady burning unit, I like the L-tube style. It can accommodate long fuel completely within the burn tunnel so no danger of it hanging up or falling out, and no smokeback risk. I have used about 30" length and rise.
I would not make the air inlet, if that is somehow separate from wood feed, smaller than the combustion zone to try to get a jet of air. You probably want air restricted some at the entry so there is not a huge amount of excess air which will just cool the fire.
For all your Montana Masonry Heater parts (also known as) Rocket Mass heater parts.
Visit me at
dragontechrmh.com Once you go brick you will never go back!
I agree. Here's the link: https://woodheat.net |