The best wood gas stove I have seen, almost does not produce or does not produce smoke, I had seen it long ago and I had lost it, now I found it again. I will try to make it bigger with the same principles. Thank you very much for your ways of teaching. Eternally grateful. God always bless you.
This is brilliant..when I look back to how we met, I was in a dark place working at a horrible job..the silver lining was I had the opportunity in meeting you good sir...you have inspired me soo much...thank you
@@outsideedgebushcraft3017 Ive been doing very well thank you boss.. We have a facebook page now called The Kotch if you'd like to message me through facebook it would be awesome and i can send you maps so you can make memories down the kotch too.. stay safe and stay wise
Dear sir. These stoves are amazing. I have built some, quite alike yours, but of in Sweden available tins, and they really perform. I have cooked potatoes for at least four hungry guests, although I have to feed some more wood, before it burned out, though they were not all ready, but anyway. It was an over-large pot. It burned well, as the tins were hot, and the gasifying turned on again. Coffee, tea, and such is a piece of cake, with a half filled burner. I have bought, and given away "ready-made" Chinese variants, made of stainless steel to my sons, and brothers family. Just in case of "bad days" and disasters. They were quite similar, except of the very upper vase, and standoffs for pot. Good fit, and allover quality, as well as compactness in storeness. I tried both of them. They burned quite similar as your "tin versions", but somewhat smokier, and sootier. Although well enough for commercial versions. In my back garden, I have a lot of big lovely birches. However, they tend to drop quite a lot of branches. This early spring, I wanted to salvage those, though they were a potential well of energy for small stoves. The weakiest got to compost, but those over 8-10 mm went to the saw. Some were around 60 mm. They were cut into stumps, and dried in boiler room. Now I have split them by knife and club, and got some 36L of good fuel for wood gas stoves. I imagine there is power for 100 to 150 cookings from just trash. Isn't it lovely to get something out from nothing? I will share this with my relatives, and may give away more stoves in the futures. Bad situations seems to come closer than I would have expected just before this summer. I had such in mind, but not that close. In future situations of floods, wood burns or such, when electricity and Internet is gone, such stoves can save lifes. Well done, sir whatever your name. I am grateful, as an old engineer I am.
Nice work, very informative. I need to build one so I shall be going around the supermarket to compare tin sizes. The flame thingy concentration bowl idea is a work of genius. Keep up the good work.
Neat little contraption, and much less cost than the $70 to $110 USD that camping supply houses price them at! Only the cost of the canned food, plus you can eat the contents of the cans used to make it! I think a preloaded can or 3 would be packable for a go bag for emergencies, instead of scrounging for firewood when needed. Thanks for posting! - The Armchair Adventurer
Really great design ! Such a thoughtful design and your tutorial as well ! Thanks so much for passing it around ! Headin to the "production facility" ...........
Very much enjoyed the video, I'm quite impressed with the burn time. I have a Kelly Kettle that I have used to boil water it boils water much faster like a rocket stove but the size is much larger. I think the amount of fuel used is quite a bit less. I think i'll have to try this. Thank you
Really neat stove there. I watched the vid on how you built it first. I love it. I may have to try to build one for myself. Oh of course I'm going to try! LOL Thanks and I just subbed you! You are very creative!
Once again a fascinating test. Clearly a very capable little burner. I'm curious to know how you decide upon the number and size of holes you use. Atb, Al
Love your videos and this design - I'm making one at the moment. I've seen someone making more and more primary air to get a really impressive flame with massive jets, but it's probably not as efficient, and that long burn time is really useful for camping. Have you tried it without the burn concentrator? How does it compare?
Very good test, but you don't show us the black stiky on the bottom of theapot. It's the common problem in many prototype... Kan you give your experiences oh this? Thanks so much. My compliments for engineering and ergonomic shape. Bye, Dario.
Interesting, my first thought would be difficulty lighting it, however I have been looking at the Swedish fire torch recently and perhaps a mini version of that might work, I will certainly give it a go. thanks for watching ATB Pete
can you please help me to find the video that you said has the detail INSTRUCTIONS on how to make it ?? I couldn't find the video thanks God bless you all there
Hi Jhonathan, smoke is just unburnt fuel, and the design of the stove is such that that these gasses are burnt at the jets at the top, thanks for watching ATB Pete
When you get tired of washing dishes from soot, let me know. Or look at this: ruclips.net/video/yV0J2bhNcRs/видео.html The weight of the furnace is 1.24 kg. Contacts at the end of the video.
If you mean for fuel use, what would beat this? Not propane, alcohol, etc., and this uses much less wood than a normal camp fire. And although we shouldn't all burn large quantities of wood in power stations, it has already taken the same amount of carbon out of the atmosphere as you put back burning it.
The best wood gas stove I have seen, almost does not produce or does not produce smoke, I had seen it long ago and I had lost it, now I found it again. I will try to make it bigger with the same principles. Thank you very much for your ways of teaching. Eternally grateful. God always bless you.
Thanks for watching
ATB Pete
This is brilliant..when I look back to how we met, I was in a dark place working at a horrible job..the silver lining was I had the opportunity in meeting you good sir...you have inspired me soo much...thank you
How you been keeping Purple, i've been watching your vids, nice job 🙂
@@outsideedgebushcraft3017 Ive been doing very well thank you boss.. We have a facebook page now called The Kotch if you'd like to message me through facebook it would be awesome and i can send you maps so you can make memories down the kotch too.. stay safe and stay wise
The best gas wood stove in youtube. I don't see nothing of smoke. Very good job. I am going to replicate your design.Thanks a lots.
How did it go?
ATB pete
That was impressive! You're a very clever fellow. Thanks for showing that to us.
Dear sir. These stoves are amazing. I have built some, quite alike yours, but of in Sweden available tins, and they really perform. I have cooked potatoes for at least four hungry guests, although I have to feed some more wood, before it burned out, though they were not all ready, but anyway. It was an over-large pot. It burned well, as the tins were hot, and the gasifying turned on again.
Coffee, tea, and such is a piece of cake, with a half filled burner.
I have bought, and given away "ready-made" Chinese variants, made of stainless steel to my sons, and brothers family. Just in case of "bad days" and disasters.
They were quite similar, except of the very upper vase, and standoffs for pot. Good fit, and allover quality, as well as compactness in storeness.
I tried both of them. They burned quite similar as your "tin versions", but somewhat smokier, and sootier. Although well enough for commercial versions.
In my back garden, I have a lot of big lovely birches. However, they tend to drop quite a lot of branches. This early spring, I wanted to salvage those, though they were a potential well of energy for small stoves. The weakiest got to compost, but those over 8-10 mm went to the saw. Some were around 60 mm. They were cut into stumps, and dried in boiler room.
Now I have split them by knife and club, and got some 36L of good fuel for wood gas stoves. I imagine there is power for 100 to 150 cookings from just trash.
Isn't it lovely to get something out from nothing? I will share this with my relatives, and may give away more stoves in the futures. Bad situations seems to come closer than I would have expected just before this summer. I had such in mind, but not that close.
In future situations of floods, wood burns or such, when electricity and Internet is gone, such stoves can save lifes.
Well done, sir whatever your name.
I am grateful, as an old engineer I am.
Thanks Bjorn, thanks for watching
ATB Pete
Nice work, very informative. I need to build one so I shall be going around the supermarket to compare tin sizes. The flame thingy concentration bowl idea is a work of genius. Keep up the good work.
Thanks for watching
ATB Pete
Neat little contraption, and much less cost than the $70 to $110 USD that camping supply houses price them at! Only the cost of the canned food, plus you can eat the contents of the cans used to make it! I think a preloaded can or 3 would be packable for a go bag for emergencies, instead of scrounging for firewood when needed. Thanks for posting! - The Armchair Adventurer
Really great design ! Such a thoughtful design and your tutorial as well ! Thanks so much for passing it around ! Headin to the "production facility" ...........
Nice of you to say so, thanks for watching
ATB Pete
Hope you enjoy, thanks for watching
ATB Pete
iv been waiting for this mate ,good job its got to be up there with the solo stove and bush buddy!!... best iv seen on youtube
Very much enjoyed the video, I'm quite impressed with the burn time. I have a Kelly Kettle that I have used to boil water it boils water much faster like a rocket stove but the size is much larger. I think the amount of fuel used is quite a bit less. I think i'll have to try this. Thank you
Excellent vid mate, really informative. Been making meths stoves recently but now giving these a go. Cheers
That is a very nice piece of stove. Good Job!!
I think I am going to replicate your design. THANK YOU!
I am glad you like it Eduardo, you won't be sorry if you do make one, I use mine a lot, thanks for watching
ATB Pete
over 30 minutes clean burning. well done 👍
Nicely done. Very enjoyable. Off to buy tin snips so I can get started!
Willingstone Thanks andy ATB Pete
Yet another great video Pete, just watched you make this stove, nice to see it working well, 2 sugars for me please.
ATB
Ray
amazing build, gonna try that for myself tomorrow...
I watched all 3 vids on this. real nice vids! cool look at the nice little stove and thank you!
+Martina Dejaquiz Thanks Martina, that's really nice of you to say so, thanks for watching
ATB Pete
Love it! Great video, enjoyed it, many useful pointers.peace.
Thanks for watching
ATB Pete
Really neat stove there. I watched the vid on how you built it first. I love it. I may have to try to build one for myself. Oh of course I'm going to try! LOL Thanks and I just subbed you! You are very creative!
Thanks Sue, thanks for taking time to comment, if you get round to making one let me know how you get on
ATB Pete
Oh sure I will let you know but it will be awhile it is 5 degrees F here now and I would have to do the project outside.
great video pete highly informagive
Once again a fascinating test. Clearly a very capable little burner.
I'm curious to know how you decide upon the number and size of holes you use.
Atb,
Al
Knucker nothing flash, just by observing how the flame 'breathes' and making adjustments plus a
little bit of pi r squared.
ATB Pete
Outside Edge Bushcraft Ah, okay I see. Thanks for getting back to me!
Al
you may be able to secure the lid with paint can lid spring clips.
I'd like to see a swedish for torch test.
Maybe 8 pieces. 4 pieces may be to bulky to burn?
Hi Larry, that's not a bad idea yup know, like a mini Swedish torch, inside the stove?
ATB Pete
Very efficient. Like it.
Love your videos and this design - I'm making one at the moment. I've seen someone making more and more primary air to get a really impressive flame with massive jets, but it's probably not as efficient, and that long burn time is really useful for camping. Have you tried it without the burn concentrator? How does it compare?
Better with the concetrater, it protects the jets, thanks for watching
ATB Pete
@@outsideedgebushcraft3017 Cheers Pete, protects them from gusts of wind, do you mean?
@@lettersquash I do, I always use wind sheild as well
Very good test, but you don't show us the black stiky on the bottom of theapot.
It's the common problem in many prototype...
Kan you give your experiences oh this?
Thanks so much.
My compliments for engineering and ergonomic shape.
Bye, Dario.
Brilliant.......!
Long live the king.
+1acroyear1 Thanks mate & thanks for watching
ATB Pete
I wonder if you just cut the log into 4 pieces instead of all the smaller twigs if you would get a better burn time.
Interesting, my first thought would be difficulty lighting it, however I have been looking at the Swedish fire torch recently and perhaps a mini version of that might work, I will certainly give it a go. thanks for watching
ATB Pete
can you please help me to find the video that you said has the detail INSTRUCTIONS on how to make it ?? I couldn't find the video thanks God bless you all there
It's called woodgas stove build, hope this helps
ATB Pete
I was impressed, do you sell these? If so how can I get on the list?
nice job
Thanks for watching
Take my money, Please take my money, that is pretty damn good, are you selling any?
you deserve me subscribe
If you smother the embers, that's a not-bad source of biochar for the garden. Bit more engineering to make that happen, or just quench the fire.
To be honest usually there isn't that much left. Thanks for watching
ATB Pete
Nice
Thanks
not that there’s anything wrong with this version, but this would be outdamstanding in stainless!
It truly would, cost a site more though !!
ATB Pete
Why no smoke?
Hi Jhonathan, smoke is just unburnt fuel, and the design of the stove is such that that these gasses are burnt at the jets at the top, thanks for watching
ATB Pete
and if you need a cameraman you know iam local
+Antonio Succo Thanks Tony, I might just take you up on that !!
ATB Pete
Any time Pete just buzz me
When you get tired of washing dishes from soot, let me know. Or look at this:
ruclips.net/video/yV0J2bhNcRs/видео.html
The weight of the furnace is 1.24 kg. Contacts at the end of the video.
what about the environment,
If you mean for fuel use, what would beat this? Not propane, alcohol, etc., and this uses much less wood than a normal camp fire. And although we shouldn't all burn large quantities of wood in power stations, it has already taken the same amount of carbon out of the atmosphere as you put back burning it.