Hot Water Rocket Stove K Type Part 2

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2019
  • Good thing come to him that ..... I forget, Its been a long time in the making . Thanks for waiting . Enjoy the drone footage from my brother in law.
    I've included Amazon links to a few of the tools I've used in this build. If you choose to purchase through one of these links, I will earn a small commission at no extra cost to you, which greatly helps to support the channel.
    “As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.”
    Brother in Law's Awesome Drone: amzn.to/2ZXvoSS
    UFO High Bay LED Light: amzn.to/2ZINewN
    12 volt hot water circulation pump: amzn.to/34Ft2M2
    Hitachi Grinder 4.5 inch: amzn.to/2PWKAzN
    Drill and Tap Combo: amzn.to/2ZJ5s26

Комментарии • 632

  • @thelazycat_
    @thelazycat_ 2 года назад +11

    So your heater has a capacity of 20.902kJ/h. 5.58kJ/s, 1,55Wh. I think you have a decent heater. There are some possibilities to increase the efficiency, but good job!

    • @moczikgabor
      @moczikgabor Год назад +3

      Might be some international discrepancy in the fractional/thousand separators, but your first and last number is not right. The total enery was 20 MJ, -> 5.56 kJ/s = 5.56 kW.
      1 kWh = 3.6 MJ

    • @thelazycat_
      @thelazycat_ Год назад +3

      @@moczikgabor yes, depends on the numbers and significance you use. When I calculate it with the Cp of 4.186 KJ/Kg.K., you get 20.093 KJ > 20 MJ. 5.58 KJ/s is correct. When you use 20 MJ, you indeed get 5.56 KJ/s. The Wh is indeed wrong, don't know why the additional /3.6 came from. It's always good that someone does the calculations over. Good job

    • @moczikgabor
      @moczikgabor Год назад +2

      @@thelazycat_ I am not complaining by that 0.02 kW difference (I used 4.2 kJ/kg*K), but the wrong magnitude. You seem to have used dot as a fractional separator (as it should be in English) and if that's true, then it is not 20.093 kJ, but it is 20093 kJ which is 20.093 MJ (I just rounded to 20 MJ, but again, I am not hung up the precision).
      The other value in the original post 1.55Wh, which is not true, nor the unit of measure is right because if you want to express power then it is just Watts. Watthours is an energy measurement.
      1 Joule = 1 Ws (Watt*second)
      3600 J = 1 Wh
      3600000 J = 1 kWh
      This last one from where that 3.6 comes from, if the units are MJ and kWh then
      3.6 MJ = 1 kWh
      This is also why 5.58 kJ/s = 5.58 kW, because Joule is Ws, thus kJ/s = kWs/s = kW
      Easy to calculate that 3.6 conversion factor any time you want, but useful to remember as the burning heat of most fuels, woods, whatever are usually given in MJ/unit, we pay the electricity by kWh, so easier to compare prices, heating times and such in human-friendlier units.

    • @moczikgabor
      @moczikgabor Год назад +2

      I might misunderstood your reply, you probably know all this, but anyway, I leave the above post as is, might be helpful for someone.

    • @iuravermeer196
      @iuravermeer196 7 месяцев назад

      i get 7kw with efefficiency 80%. it's close to reality?

  • @onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475
    @onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475 3 года назад +24

    Anybody that complains "you talk too much" is welcome to watch a youtube vid on 'how to use the volume buttons on your computer'. 😉 (Talking people through projects is right and good).

    • @gueacil7131
      @gueacil7131 2 года назад +3

      Sometimes i got bored on project video without naration or without detail explanation of what, why or how.

    • @hyselwatchandclockrepair1874
      @hyselwatchandclockrepair1874 Год назад +3

      I appreciate the running narration of what you are doing and thinking out loud because it gives me better understanding of why you do certain things the way you do plus it helps keep the focus of what you are doing much better. Please don’t change your approach to recording what you are doing and why you are doing it. Your videography is superb and your down-to-earth approach is extremely helpful especially with your narration. Thanks so very much for sharing your thoughts and your skills.

  • @campnihamattainakamono
    @campnihamattainakamono Год назад +2

    I'm Japanese, I love the outdoors, this video is exciting, thank you

  • @leighharvey9150
    @leighharvey9150 2 года назад +1

    Not getting to enjoy your pie is about the most relatable thing ever

  • @jessebarclift8533
    @jessebarclift8533 4 года назад +5

    You want your water tank higher than your stove and you want to draw the water from the bottom of the tank and the return line slightly above center mass. That's how hot water heaters create thermal layers the bottom is always the coldest with the hot being on the top layers (heat rises) hook it up like that and I think you'll have the best rocket water heater I've seen yet. 👌🏼

  • @GuitarAveragePlayer
    @GuitarAveragePlayer 7 месяцев назад

    I enjoy seeing your family in the video. Your girls are adorable.

  • @GreenShortzDIY
    @GreenShortzDIY 4 года назад +5

    Meat pie breaks in every video. :-) Enjoying the rocket stove builds. Not surprised that you are a pro sheet metal fabricator, because your precision on the metal work is impeccable. Glad your RUclips proceeds were able to fund your folder, what an amazing tool and great time saver...a good investment for sure. And for your cardboard cut out method to get the odd shape figured out, a proper "good on ya."

  • @loucinci3922
    @loucinci3922 3 года назад

    Its nice to share with your little ones. Enjoy them while you can. They grow up so fast. Made me smile thinking about my two (18 & 16 now).

  • @blueboi5000
    @blueboi5000 4 года назад +24

    This should be sold in a shop. Great work.

  • @johnshuttleworth983
    @johnshuttleworth983 Год назад

    Jeez that’s smart putting a padlockThinking back to my childhood

  • @mrf5347
    @mrf5347 4 года назад +3

    Awesome craftsmanship!
    The kids remind me of my 3 daughters! God has blessed you greatly, may you cherish your family to a great old age!

  • @ianmoore525
    @ianmoore525 Год назад

    When u had that problem towards the end, I thought it was the same mistake I made plumbing up an old crown *5 semi combustion stove to my old 30gal hot water system. Had the top pipe too close to the top on water heater, it used to bubble and boil when it was cranking. Still worked for years. Prob nowhere near as hot as ur rocket stove. Great vid 👍🏻

  • @DrLove911
    @DrLove911 4 года назад

    My 7 year old niece Emily died Oct 9th . She loved Pepa pig. I'm glad that was in this video. Made me think about things a little different. Great water heater.

  • @HK-fu2oe
    @HK-fu2oe 2 года назад

    Perfekt, du kannst kein Ammi sein! Vielleicht Schweizer, Koreaner, Japaner oder Deutscher. Für einen Ammi ist deine Arbeit zu perfekt !!!

  • @EricFeldmann
    @EricFeldmann Год назад

    you have to hug them all the time, so they grow up slower. and EVERYONE LOVES PIE.

  • @scottharkness2905
    @scottharkness2905 4 года назад +2

    Your workmanship is a thing of beauty! Wow!

  • @peterralph6112
    @peterralph6112 4 года назад +15

    Hot water always rises. So the top outlet pipe from the top of the heat exchanger needs to constantly rise to the top of the storage tank (even in your heat exchanger have a sloping annulus ring to a rising outlet pipe. Have no pockets where steam can be trapped). Similarly, the cold water feed pipe at the bottom of the storage tank should also rise to the inlet of the heat exchanger (this water will eventually get hot too!). These inlet and outlet pipes should be lagged with insulation as well. Also hot water expands so the heat exchanger outlet pipe needs to be a larger diameter than the cold water feed into the bottom of the heat exchanger (experiment with 20mm cold in and 25mm hot out say. You also want to keep friction loss down to aid thermosiphon). If the flue is too hot make the heat exchanger jacket longer and take out more heat. Your heat exchange jacket design is the right approach compared to say copper pipe wound around the flue or in a water tank as this too easily creates steam and danger of pressure buildup.
    Excellent build by the way and great helpers!

  • @iant5909
    @iant5909 2 года назад +9

    CRITICAL: The supply line from the heat box to the storage resevoir needs to be POSITIVE angle, upward slope all the way. Heat (incl. heat in water) only travel UP hill. Any down or negative slope in the line will cause AIR LOCK. Even if just 1 degree it will work, but MUST be 1 degree POSITIVE. Any down or dip in pipe ( as I saw in video will fail).
    CRITICAL: A plumber experienced in connecting wood stove to HWS did my fire box years ago. He said this is the most common fail that amateurs make. Supply line must be all uphill.

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 Год назад +3

    Reminds me of the old folders we had back at school. Perfect for sheet metal origami. Love your work dude.

    • @spankitout
      @spankitout Год назад +1

      They are called a brake, but dont ask me why.

  • @billcarton7976
    @billcarton7976 Год назад

    I also like you’re honesty in the builds, if you don’t know something you say so. An point to a source for the information. TY

  • @markfryer9880
    @markfryer9880 4 года назад +9

    While it might be hard to eat a meat pie in your house, in years to come you will all look back at the video as a special family moment. Dogs and kids must have hearing tuned for the sounds of pie and chip packages.

  • @dwightwilson1764
    @dwightwilson1764 4 года назад +1

    I also absolutely Love your family! Your fabrication work is also on point!

  • @fitnessguruandypersonaltra4106
    @fitnessguruandypersonaltra4106 2 года назад +1

    Amazing. Love the way you talk and work and thanks for sharing 💗

  • @sawyerscott7360
    @sawyerscott7360 4 года назад +1

    ❤️❤️❤️❤️
    Love your
    mad metal skills,
    video editing & presentation,
    narration,
    and most of all, your family!
    I wouldn’t change a thing. Looking forward to more of your vids.

  • @bobbylong4443
    @bobbylong4443 4 месяца назад

    ❤❤❤❤❤ that was awesome build and and you explaining how and why was marvelous rorschach

  • @smaqdaddy
    @smaqdaddy 5 месяцев назад

    Brilliant work projecting that front panel's penetrations! You are a very skilled craftsman sir! Don't take any slack on the grinder use, someone who can use one is always impressive!

  • @trevorcochran2173
    @trevorcochran2173 4 года назад +23

    love watching the build. It has given me some great ideas! In the comments I have not seen anything about your heat extraction position and I believe that is your biggest inefficiency (that and the fact that 95% of your heat is lost up the chimney. Would it not be significantly more efficient to not extract the heat from your burn chamber? Every degree you lower the burn chamber is another level of tar you cannot crack which leads to waste and smoke and ash. The reason people add insulation around the burn chamber is to jack the temperature up to 1800-2000 °F where wood will fully burn, not to increase the heat transfer to the water (though I guess it has that as a modest secondary benefit). You can then use the extremely hot exhaust gasses in a downdraft configuration to shed heat into your working fluid. Of course, that will also burn your stainless, so you'd need a refractory liner.
    Also, I think Perlite is the perfect insulator for what you are doing. Cheap and light and where rockwool burns at 900 (and the binders well before) perlite can hit your 1800 and keep right on ticking.

  • @edkleindienst
    @edkleindienst 3 года назад +5

    It's amazing what you can do with a grinder!!

  • @delaguitara
    @delaguitara 4 года назад +1

    Bloody genius!!! And I love your family too mate!!! Two thumbs up and one big high five.

  • @thomasbrooch8697
    @thomasbrooch8697 4 года назад +1

    Plumber here and you're right it was heating faster than thermal siphon could move the heat out of the exchanger, so it was flashing to steam. If you start making those things just make the next one with larger pipes if it is supposed to be for off grid were you have no power supply, also in the past when they used thermal siphon in this manner, they would use a insulated tank and hang your rocket stove or burner right on the tank, the shorter the runs the better siphon works. If off grid isn't a mandate than use a pump and consider piping cold to the top of the exchanger forcing the water to go down against the heat it will give you some efficiency gain. I'm from New England and I wish I knew a metal worker/ welder with your skills, nice build! Hope you get the bugs worked out with your new heater.

  • @natsirim499
    @natsirim499 4 года назад +1

    Great to have the C/H water ports coming from One Side of the unit. Fantastic.

  • @K4K96
    @K4K96 2 года назад

    Brilliant craftmanship.

  • @RollsFPV
    @RollsFPV 4 года назад +10

    Love ya videos, keep em coming!
    The upper outlet pipe had a dip in it, it has to constantly rise or it wont thermal siphon.
    Been watching many rocket stove videos lately looking to design one to heat water on my camper trailer (Don't want to use non renewable Gas, using induction cooker, solar etc) and have watched most of yours and this one, well its almost perfect mate. Quite well designed and some great skills showed off in the build process (Not to mention the great memories you are making with your family, makes for a great story for us viewers). Hope ya don't mind me pinching some of your ideas, with a few small modifications for my camp trailer. Assuming I have the skills to build it. lol..

    • @radargenta
      @radargenta 2 года назад +2

      Hi Rolls FPV, two years later...tell us about your project, did it work?

  • @josiahdewitt3516
    @josiahdewitt3516 8 месяцев назад

    Exactly what I was looking for, best RS HW heater vid on YT. Very efficient, thank you for your effort and sharing

  • @ProlificInvention
    @ProlificInvention 4 года назад +2

    Been waiting for this! The original video was one of the best and most unique useful rocket stove designs I've seen..You are one creative Aussie tinkerer.

  • @notsoniceduck
    @notsoniceduck 3 года назад +2

    I love that you use just a few tools and you sure are an artist with a grinder. :)

  • @paulinebayly1024
    @paulinebayly1024 4 года назад +1

    I have never commented on anyone's work before, but you are very impressive, great job.
    Albert

  • @jokkiossaka3306
    @jokkiossaka3306 2 года назад

    You are a metal artist !

  • @keithsyers5833
    @keithsyers5833 3 года назад +1

    Sorry me again I've just had a look through 200 comments and air nibbler was mentioned a couple of times a cheap one around £30 $Australia 40 ish. One comment has a 20mm bore pipe to middle of tank so the hot water rises and cold water out from bottom a couple said tank above boiler and straight pipes. A couple of questions does it get really cold. Do you want hot water all the time if you want use the system indoors to run your central heating with a high flow pump and indirect water heating. You've got it so right. You're an artist thank you for teaching me something I hope I have helped you

  • @matts1351
    @matts1351 Год назад

    I remember eating Aussie Pies as a kid. Popular in the 90’s in the states. A couple different flavors. Me dear ol mum told me one was made of kangaroo meat and that I would be able to jump much further… the other was koala so i could climb trees higher!

  • @johnswimcat
    @johnswimcat 4 года назад +3

    Superb metalwork and I really like that you didn't chuck the chicken off your lathe to part off. I have a Bosch metal cutting jigsaw which I have to say is pretty good. I'm amazed that you can use a grinder with such accuracy. Cutting a circle or ellipse with a flat disc, wow!

  • @johncranwell3783
    @johncranwell3783 Год назад

    Totally engaged by what you made there and it's something that I'm going to do this autumn.
    Looking forward to following you on more of your projects

  • @emjay8387
    @emjay8387 4 года назад +12

    Love your metalwork! Brilliant!
    Regarding the thermosiphon, they will always vapour-lock if the water boils at any point in the tube. Forgive me if i over-explain, but the liquid water will expand as it heats and start to form bubbles of water vapour. If those bubbles can’t get to the outlet as small bubbles, they join together into a large bubble that takes up the whole diameter of the tube and the thermosiphon (or any siphon) will be interrupted. This will then compound because the water will stop flowing, be exposed to more heat, and boil even more.
    Boiling can be avoided by increasing flow rate. This could be by having a tube with a large enough diameter that bubbles can always get to the outlet before they block the tube, or by pumping water through faster (but then you need power). You will avoid boiling longer (i think) if you pump the coldest water through, that is if you pump from the bottom of your tank.
    Boiling can also be avoided by reducing the water’s exposure to heat; either have a smaller burn chamber or have fewer windings of your copper tube.
    Any thermosiphon system will need a bit of fiddling to maximise performance.
    Top quality build though! And thanks for the great video!

  • @Pats-Shed
    @Pats-Shed 4 года назад +4

    The thermo-siphon only works if there's a steady rise from the top of the stove outlet to the hot water tank, otherwise it'll vapour lock at the top of the stove . A cheap source of 12vdc pumps is a Toyota Prius inverter coolant pump, low current and submersible if you seal the electrical connections. This stove is turning out very nice , keep up the good work.

    • @RangieNZ
      @RangieNZ 4 года назад

      Yes, the big 'downwards loop' after it comes out of the top heater port is the problem. Just use a straight length of hose, preferably on an uphill gradient, going towards the barrel. That may also mean, you need to lift the barrel slightly (- say on a pallet), to get the rising gradient on the pipe.

  • @gregphillips3400
    @gregphillips3400 4 года назад

    I love projects like this. I work where we Spiralweld on a lathe with MIG, Lifeboat Propshafts, Powerstation Steams etc to repair them, we use Ceramic Fibre Wool to wrap stuff to cool it slowly, that would ideal to insulate this!

  • @4everchristian
    @4everchristian 4 года назад

    Wonderful everything.
    Some times some guys are so blessed.
    Nice set of skills nice shop and shopper
    But the best thing was this peace that you whole video sends out .
    God bless you
    Christian

  • @ElderlyIron
    @ElderlyIron 3 года назад

    Like Grampa used to say. There's more than one way to skin a cat, but no matter how you do it, the cat ain't gonna like it!
    You're building a rocket water heater, you have a chicken on your lathe, you eat meat pies and your wife brings you kefir. You know now that I'm gonna HAVE to subscribe!
    By the way, you can daisy chain 3 of those 4 foot LED "florescent" lights for probably the same cost as the high bay light.
    Just a little something to put in the back of your mind, wild land fire shelters utilize aluminum because it reflects 98% of radiant heat. I have aircraft aluminum sheets about my wood stove on the walls. Works a treat!
    Anya Ha Sayo!

  • @anselmojorge6398
    @anselmojorge6398 4 года назад +4

    '' up '' * Nice Job ! Congratulations ( from Brazil )

  • @AR-fh2uh
    @AR-fh2uh 4 года назад +1

    First one of your videos that I have come across.
    Feel ready to hand in my man card after seeing you free hand those circles with a 5" grinder. 👍

  • @roncook8409
    @roncook8409 4 года назад

    Great craftsmanship. You don't see that much anymore, these days. I really enjoyed watching this. My favorite was the use of the grinder, as if it were a jigsaw (nicely done). That 'flange' is called an escutcheon plate. in the U.S.A., well, in the 'Plumbing Trade' anyway.

  • @rowanbrecknell4021
    @rowanbrecknell4021 2 года назад +1

    I rebuilt my Solar Hart in 2009 hot water system. The tin trays were cheap. The most expensive part was I put marine perspex on to cover the trays. Knowing now all I would do is make tin tops. I would go all stainless steel for the heat traps. Copper vacume tubes would be the go as well to cut down on water flow and joins.

  • @JayPlaehn
    @JayPlaehn 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for sharing your learning curve and experiments very clever
    Living off grid for 15 years now I have built two in line on demand wood fire hot water heaters - I have spent so many hours thinking how best to easily and most inexpensively improve my last experiment - my first 50 foot 3/8 copper tube inside an old wood stove oven retrofitted to run the flame over the fire box then through the 5 inch shelf with copper coil to standard 6 inch chimney works great but 1) slow tub fill 2) tub does burn out after a few years of use here and there not daily but a lot - my second all steel double long 5 gallon propane tank inside a craftsman air compressor tank making a full water jacket works great faster but the water is not chrystal clear as with copper tub (or a stainless) it is better now just fine me on season three as it fully rusts in but the hole point of off grid spring water outdoor tub is “Chrystal Clear Water” especially if I have female company - I also took a conventional 5 foot cast iron tub with square lip on top and built a fiberglassed double 2x4 extender top that I silicone sealed to the tub making it much deeper with head rest and foot extender shelf - at 6 foot 5 I can fully float and soak for hours in the rain or snow or clear nights - when cold it takes a lot more wood to keep it hot - for me the key is an open in line flow system where the control valve is on the inlet for heat control of flow and safety as the system is always open and can not build pressure

  • @allaboutelephants6837
    @allaboutelephants6837 4 года назад +1

    Your girls are adorable! A fun moment in the video! Great video too!

  • @allstreamerscheat8784
    @allstreamerscheat8784 4 года назад

    Love your videos mate, really like the plan as you go attitude you have towards the rocket stoves.

  • @kevindavis3841
    @kevindavis3841 4 года назад

    Man, go with what works best for you. If someone watched your video so they cold tell you how to do it they are just confused. I work with ceramic tile and natural stone. Angle grinder is my #1 go-to cutting, boring and scoring tool. I think you're amazing with your grinder. Thanks for sharing 👍🏻

  • @harryendawypknightly7291
    @harryendawypknightly7291 2 года назад

    Spot on nice to watch a professional job by an obviously a good craftsman

  • @tonyurquhart8278
    @tonyurquhart8278 4 года назад +2

    Hi Little Aussie Rockets, I just discovered this channel. Love your work. I also saw the hot water boiler you built last Dec. I built a similar thing some years ago. Ver 1 was about 1993 based on a water boiler or "Donkey" which we used as Cadets when at high school.
    I have been helping out at a school camp for 20 years where they use fires to cook. I take my water boiler so that all the campers, seasoned & rookies can get some hot water. I used a copper tank which originally went over the fire. Then around 2004 added a "Heating Coil".
    I used 4 turns of 1/2" copper tube bent to about a 250mm diameter (so about 3m of pipe in the fire). I plumbed the bottom of the coil into the bottom of the tank & the top (hot supply) line went into the tank about 1/2 way up the tank. The coil simply sat in the fire & you could cook on it too.
    The tank was closed except for the "Overflow" spout which is where you got the water out, plus it had a large funnel on top with an internal pipe that made the cold water spill to the bottom inside. the tank was full to overflowing. The coil heated & circulated the water & when you wanted water you poured in the amount required of cold water into the funnel & the same amount of hot came out the overflow. Still use it ti this day. I am happy to send you a photo if you are interested.

  • @YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls
    @YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls 9 месяцев назад

    I'll be making something similar in the future (once we move), so I can have a wood fired hot tub. I'll be making it out of cement, most likely using a wooden former (that will be burned away during the initial burn). It will, of course, be a rocket stove like yours. I'll probably bend copper pipe around the flue then wrap that is similar tape to yours, then a fire cement casing. It will have to be set lower than the hot tub, so the flue is at the same level as the water. Self priming, just fill the tub and the tubes will be full of water, passive heat driven flow. Can't wait.

  • @luciduous
    @luciduous 4 года назад +2

    Lol, love the 'rat pie's. Great work, mate! Can't wait to make my first rocket

  • @y0uCantHandle
    @y0uCantHandle 3 года назад

    Love your work mate, you seem like a top bloke too with a lovely family, livin the dream

  • @cameronghafour5583
    @cameronghafour5583 4 года назад

    Good job well done,I like your skills with the way you use the grinder, your adorable daughters remind me of my daughters. I have to share what I eat with them too

  • @murmur3966
    @murmur3966 2 года назад +2

    You could add in a one way inline check valve to force the thermal siphoning to flow in the proper direction and stop it from turning to steam. Then it will get the lower cooler water feeding into the heater through the valve. Great stuff keep up the awesome content.

  • @ridermak4111
    @ridermak4111 4 года назад

    It is quite obvious that it’s the tool you use the most. Your accuracy is outstanding. 🤜🤛

  • @RideaKawasaki77
    @RideaKawasaki77 4 года назад

    Love your vids brother. Beautiful family. God bless

  • @paulwalsh4542
    @paulwalsh4542 2 года назад +1

    Love this vid but fingers in front of the grinder scare me.
    Keep up the good work, 👆😜

  • @CD-xo5ju
    @CD-xo5ju 3 года назад

    Brilliant vids.hope to get a few watched while I’m off work and out of action. Well done and keep up the great work 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @billcarton7976
    @billcarton7976 Год назад

    A chicken on the lathe, cool! Really like your shows! Keep on truckn buddy!

  • @joepublic2454
    @joepublic2454 4 года назад

    Beautiful work of art!

  • @thylacine1962
    @thylacine1962 4 года назад

    Very creative indeed. From the comments I feel your inspiring others to have a go. Well done. I really enjoyed this build. Good luck with future projects Mate.

  • @alabalistic
    @alabalistic 2 года назад

    OMG, this is what I'm looking for. Great build.

  • @davekauffman8727
    @davekauffman8727 4 года назад +10

    I absolutely love your family, those kids are adorable, and your wife is great. The chickens probably make for tasty meals :-)
    In order to keep that heating unit producing heat it needs a steady source of wood, good for a bath, or cooking, but you'll need to shower fast because I've gone through a lot of wood with the rocket stoves I've built, and it didn't take long to burn thick wood.

  • @TheGbow0704
    @TheGbow0704 4 года назад +1

    Great series. .. love the chickens photo-bombing your vids, they steal the show

  • @tomeighty
    @tomeighty 4 года назад

    Awesome video! Keep up the good work, I enjoy watching videos like this.

  • @checkedoutchris
    @checkedoutchris 10 месяцев назад

    I know I'm late to the party. Great video though! Love the little family time vignettes. 😀
    Also, good job on the work. I'm a proponent of making my own improvised tools and enjoy watching folks who aren't afraid of building their own stuff if needed.
    Please keep up the good work!

  • @NoChannelChannel
    @NoChannelChannel 3 года назад

    You talk just the truth awesome, you have the ultimate blokes shed fit out

  • @cannabis_culture518
    @cannabis_culture518 2 года назад

    Great work ! Great finished product!!

  • @eby6114
    @eby6114 4 года назад +2

    Great experiments. Been thinking of 100 ft of copper tube in my attic to pre heat water before entering the water heater. Ive never soldered copper before and hate to start above my ceiling lol, maybe compression fittings. No chance of freezing pipes where I live. Thanks for your videos

  • @willykitheka7618
    @willykitheka7618 3 года назад

    At 9:30, believe me, the grinder is not the got to tool for accuracy. The accuracy is in your hand's man! I see the way you use the tool...that's a master craftsman at work!😄😄😄

  • @skeets6060
    @skeets6060 4 года назад +9

    Dude love them little ones all you can they grow way to bloody fast and one day she is going to come home and say Daddy look what followed me home,,, Can I keep HIM? Oh and a nice build

  • @billpemberton3982
    @billpemberton3982 4 года назад

    Dude, you are a rock star at cutting circles with your grinder. Also I'm a 62 year old Canadian and I've been eating meat pie since I was a wee lad. Love your vids!

  • @rickhaver5876
    @rickhaver5876 4 года назад

    One word: Fantastic!

  • @Tinman20737
    @Tinman20737 4 года назад

    Great video. Informative, and fun to watch. Please keep it up. Thank you.

  • @darrenyoung7707
    @darrenyoung7707 Год назад

    Nice freehand cutting there. Neat. 🙂

  • @manofthetombs
    @manofthetombs 4 года назад +1

    It's almost the size of your daughter :D always fun to watch your channel!

  • @manuelgonzalez-wy2bn
    @manuelgonzalez-wy2bn 3 года назад +1

    original idea:a hot water rocket stove.......final product.....? A NUCLEAR REACTOR .....MAAAATE!!! you are a genius

  • @madmikemakes3056
    @madmikemakes3056 4 года назад

    Great project and video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @nickhenley8040
    @nickhenley8040 4 года назад

    Really looking forward to the solar water heater 😍

  • @AutoHoax
    @AutoHoax 3 года назад

    As a plumber when I was working at mechanical shops I always envied that tin benders , fabricators and pipe fotter welders got to work with so many different machines and tools that we didn't get to work with. A carpenter or auto mechanic never interested me much but to be able to take a roll of metal and make the ducts or other projects they would take in when the normal work slowed down was impressive. As a full weld metal shop they could basically do almost any type of metal work. They had ever type of welder , roller, break, guillotine, gantry fabricator tables. The mathematics of building a eccentric or concentric off set out of any material or thickness of metal is an admirable skill set. All rhe new technology is cool and interesting but the job description that is being replaced gives one a melancholy feeling. To know that so many of our kids and grandkids won't have the experience of a har days work because that type of work has been offshored or a machine can do it much more efficiently and cost effective.

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  3 года назад

      So many of skills are being lost due to "progress" I spend as much time as I can with older trade's men. Learning a lot of good tricks and the odd bad one😁

  • @AM-to7nt
    @AM-to7nt 4 года назад

    Here in the desert if you forget to let the water run from the hose first you risk getting 2nd degree burns. if we want cool water we let it run for 30 mins after the sun goes down. You have made the Best looking rocket stove I've seen by far, keep up the good work.

  • @boiangiuioncristianboiangi1630

    beautiful work ! good job .

  • @databang
    @databang 3 года назад

    I enjoy your videos and interested in methods that I’m not used to in fabrication. That’s a neat metal bending thingamagingger! BTW, cute family. Thanks for sharing.

  • @stevenboughner7255
    @stevenboughner7255 3 года назад

    Great Build! I've never seen anybody basically free hand cut a hole with a grinder. That is one of the reasons I subscribed to you channel.

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  3 года назад

      Thank you Sir 👍

    • @4486xxdawson
      @4486xxdawson 3 года назад

      I cut toilet flange holes with a rip saw the same way lol , i guess im not the only one cutting round holes with a strait cut saw lol ...

  • @kelleysimonds5945
    @kelleysimonds5945 4 года назад +1

    Nice craftsmanship - new subscriber

  • @radargenta
    @radargenta 4 года назад

    Very nice job. Congratulations from Brazil.

  • @ridermak4111
    @ridermak4111 4 года назад +1

    It is a very rare occurrence that I watch all of a 37 minute build video.
    Sometimes because of the host.
    Sometimes because of bad audio/video.
    Suddenly this one was over ! 🤓🤙

  • @wistonhernandez7413
    @wistonhernandez7413 4 года назад +1

    Amazing work,beautiful family, good answer about the grinder 👍

  • @jamielucchesi6057
    @jamielucchesi6057 4 года назад

    I love Pie's bro, and I love your work...you the man

    • @jamielucchesi6057
      @jamielucchesi6057 4 года назад

      I want this in my sprinter van...haha take my money
      Your work is awesome...so into detail...Rusty sweatshirt... I was always a Quicksilver guy...NIce project bro

    • @jamielucchesi6057
      @jamielucchesi6057 4 года назад

      I do spray foam...that rock whool is not the dense stuff. You put that tape on and spray foam the cavity...wowsers

  • @MrJFoster1984
    @MrJFoster1984 4 года назад

    Sorry mate, had to pull you up on the meat pie. Came from the UK to here, and from the Roman soldiers when they invaded the UK. The soldiers used to take with them on long hikes. Nice builds by the way.

  • @user-we1ku4ke5j
    @user-we1ku4ke5j 4 года назад +2

    You're really good at making things, welding... Good!! I'm getting another inspiration from watching your RUclips. It's good to have a subscription.^^

  • @alexalvarez2495
    @alexalvarez2495 4 года назад +4

    Usually, to avoid thermal shock, you might want to flow water downwards... Anyway, your design and accomplishment seems outstanding to me... congratulations!