Mike Oldham

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since Dec 22, 2019
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Recent posts by Mike Oldham

Hard to see for some reason but it's hitting 87 degrees coming into the shop. Needed to burn a hotter fire to get all the paint off the barrel, but at least I have heat coming in....and a lot of smoke from the burning paint. I'll give it a good firing tomorrow and burn everything off. Barrel alao doesnt have enough draw so, because I have the bung holes above and below the door, I'll get a piece of pipe to screw into the larger hole and put an adjustable flap on it. That should let enough air in.
5 years ago
To start, I'd like to thank all for the comments, and support.

I've not fired this up yet because its going to smoke like crazy the first time i do, so I want to wait until night time to do it. The shop, which was a stand alone two bay garage, is insulated beautifully. Air gaps around the bay doors, but if it's a problem when the real cold weather hits, I have plastic I can cover them over with.

I wish I could run the pipes underground, but getting them into the shop would be challenging. I think. For now I'm going to see about wrapping them in kaowool and then seeing if I can waterproof it somehow. 50 degree weather for the next two days so i need to jump on that. Didnt think about aircrete over the pipes. Have to give that some though.

I wanted to do 6" pipe, but had the 4" on hand. Suck part is, two weeks after I bricked in the 4", my brother in law told me he has a ton of 6" I could have had. If 4" isnt moving the heat fast enough, I'll get some 6" from him and replace the 4"  or maybe run another set of 4". Have to see what would be easier.

Right now the roof are just a couple of road signs I picked up from work years ago. Not sure what the reflective part is made of, but I bet it smokes bad once it heats up. Going to do aircrete interlocking slabs at some point for the roof, but I haven't done it before so it'll be a bit before I get that going.

Dont know if I can link on here, but here's a video of what aircrete is if you havent seen it before. Should have made the whole thing out of this stuff.
https://youtu.be/zTvy5Ut8eps

Updated pic from this morning. Added support wire cos' I almost lost it in high winds the other day. Buckets with bricks are holding it for now, I'll anchor it properly at some point in the near future. Also had 4" of water in the barrel. Going to have to seal everything up. Maybe use high heat silicone, or that refractory putty I have.
5 years ago
I was thinking of putting kaywool around the pipes and then covering with plastic. Keeping it all waterproof without the heat of the pipe melting anything I tried waterproofing it with may be a problem. Cant go underground with the pipes, that's beyond what I can do myself.
5 years ago
Hi Thomas, thank you for the suggestions
I have castable refractory, like morter, and a bunch of refractory "putty", and a few rolls of kaowool (?) that we used in our furnaces at work, which unfortunatly went out of business two months ago...which is how I ended up with all of it. The kaowool would insulate it beautifully but I'm not sure about any fibers that may beblow off it and then be blown into the shop. Also, when it gets wet, its mush, and I think in a good rain, this will leak from the roof. The refractory may offgas when heated, though I'm not sure. Its industrial and not really made for this application, but would be waterproof, though not sure of insulating properties. I have an inline fan I can pull air into the shop with, but afraid the temp of the air would cook it. Because its only 4" I thought of using both fans, but havent got that far yet.
5 years ago
I needed a way to heat my shop with a wood stove without actually putting it in the shop so here's what I did.

Where I work, we use 100+ year old bricks to put freshly poured aluminum blocks on. The blocks (actually called sows) range in the 900 degree area, weigh about 1600# each, are stacked 3 high, and the bricks dont crack or explode. Only problem I ran into using them is theyre not all the same size.

Used landscaping adhesive on the bricks and when done, put quikwall on the outside for support. I have refractory im going to line the inside with, but the temps are too cold to do that right now. Have to wait until spring to finish that part.  

Used 4" duct pipe, only cos' I had it on hand. Maybe should have gone 6"? Also had a nice 4" blower thats used to push air on the cold side into the box. After a couple good hot fires, I'm not worried about zinc fumes.

The roof are a couple of old road signs I had but I'm going to make some aircreat interlocking slabs at some point to replace them.

Other then the adhesive and barrel kit, and having to make a few trips to get the bricks, I had everything else on hand, so I'm in about $100.
5 years ago