Projects, plans, resources - now on the Permies.com digital marketplace.
Try the Everything Combo as a reference guide.
God of procrastination https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1EoT9sedqY
Bill McGee wrote:Sandy, here are photos of my stove. I keep water in pots as cooling thermal mass in the summer. (not all pots shown- been steaming crabs)
My wife calls it the Nacatamale kitchen![]()
...
-my understanding is that waters thermal mass is 4x > than concrete or cob by weight.
So my 55 gallons of water = 450 lb~=2000 lb concrete/cob mass?
Thanks again for the advice
Projects, plans, resources - now on the Permies.com digital marketplace.
Try the Everything Combo as a reference guide.
Satamax Antone wrote:Erica, staright away, i notice something, you haven't talked about bells. They seem low mass enough to be taken into account.
Like Sandy Mathieu's recent work
http://blog.dragonheaters.com/6-dragon-burner-masonry-heater-using-chimney-flues-part-5-2/
Or Peter van den Berg inspired massakachel. May be not light enough yet, but could certainly be lightened to fit other spaces.
http://technologieforum.forumatic.com/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=27
I don't know much about the us. But over here, lots of flats and houses are made out of concrete or stone. And making the pipe run directly against a big inside supporting wall, and covering it with cob which is also stuck to the wall could lead to amazing thermal mass. Another option could be to make a second "bell", after the barrel. Which would be tall and flat. Think something the size of a matress, in which the gasses would go through, and still have convection movements; stuck against a brick wall.
Being timber framer/roofer, another option springs to mind; spread the load. two or three big wooden beams or even RSJ linked somehow by spacers and you build your mass on that, using the beams as part of the mass. But there's the scorching problem. RSJs might be better at the scorching isue, but the problem is expansion which should be taken into account. Spreading the load over 20' or even 40' feet could be possible. If the mass is concentrated on some part of this, the ends of the beams could be hiden transforming theses into a little platform, with wood flooring or something.
People with hearths should have no problem fitting whatever rocket they want, and using the wall mass. And usual fireplaces should not be that dificult either.
One thing, for example, i'm going astray from the barrels. They are usefull, but i want square "heat exchangers" so i can pile up bricks of concrete pavers or whatever around. I mean dry stacking some standardized massonry elements. This would enable to have slower heat and using a bigger rocket into a smaller space. Charging the following mass faster.
HTH.
Max.
Projects, plans, resources - now on the Permies.com digital marketplace.
Try the Everything Combo as a reference guide.
God of procrastination https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1EoT9sedqY
Satamax Antone wrote:Erica, staright away, i notice something, you haven't talked about bells. They seem low mass enough to be taken into account.
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win." --Mahatma Gandhi
"Preach the Gospel always, and if necessary, use words." --Francis of Assisi.
"Family farms work when the whole family works the farm." -- Adam Klaus
Bill McGee wrote:Satamax, you mentioned spreading the load. Would a 3/4"x4'x8' plywood pad work (32 sf vs 19sf). Any possibility to share the load with the wall and ceiling joists?
God of procrastination https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1EoT9sedqY
God of procrastination https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1EoT9sedqY
God of procrastination https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1EoT9sedqY
God of procrastination https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1EoT9sedqY
|
I've been selected to go to the moon! All thanks to this tiny ad:
heat your home with yard waste and cardboard
https://freeheat.info
|