Keep in mind that I've only used it for a couple weeks, that being said, so far so good ruclips.net/user/postUgkxAU9pOCSV9Y5JprooHvfxTpOrt4hx8uRM . Using it at 8 ft. by 8ft. deer blind that is insulated. I have to keep the door cracked for it to get enough air to burn, but that is very likely the wood I've used. Much better quality than I expected for the price. Now if I can just take it easy in the beginning it won't be 90 degrees in my blind. All in all it seems like a keeper.
If you have access to Campbell's Chunky brand soups, you can make free stove pipes with the empty cans. Simply remove both ends with a side cutting can opener. Now the rounded end can be forced into the straight end to make pipes that are four or five cans long. These cans should be pushed together as far as you can make them go and they will lock solidly. After you have made all of the segments that you need, you should press the sections together more gently and not so deep so they can be taken apart when you are ready to store them. And many of the soups are quite tasty!
Thanks for the idea.I will use this on an old double stainless steel kitchen sink to make a bigger on for what I need.Thanks for posting and again for the idea.
it looks awesome i'm sure it will do the job better than the same thing at 5 times the price what weight is it by the way and i'm not trying to nock your work just be careful with the flue there seams to be a big gap around the pipe where it met's the stove and i know a guy who got carbon monoxide poisoning from a badly sealed flue, granted that was on a boat not a tent but if you have time to seal it better it could be worth the extra effort.
Outstanding! I can see how it can pack down for transport . A couple personal touches or fine tuning, it will serve me well! As will the 400 bucks itll save me!! Well Done Sir!
Thank you very much my friend , means a lot to hear from you , many stuff learned from your hot tent project. Yes I wanted to make the whole as big as possible so I ditched the hinge and had to think of something. Hope to try it camping soon. God bless Nick
Thanks fir posting this. It is the simplest and easiest to follow so far for me. Have you thought of making a swing grill? Well, if you you do and post it, I'd sure be grateful. All the best. Thanks, happy camping .
When you drill stainless steel you need to run the bit so slow that you can see it turn and cut. Otherwise you will take the edge off of the bit, running it fast, and it won't cut.
I liked your idea that much that I created this weekend my own. It is working nice, so if my AliExpress tipi tent has been delivered I will go out for a field test! Thanks for sharing.
I know this is a silly answer but if all you want is a cooking stove or just to burn it for an hour before going to sleep if fixing up to a hot tent, then you could just let it cool off and empty it the same way you fed it in the morning before relighting it. I would rather pay for a proper one though. That will probably warp over time. Great for a shed but I wouldn't trust it in the wilds with mine or another person or persons life/s on the line.
I love the idea to use those stainless steel trays! But I think you could make a few minor improvements to the design. If you put some of those rods you used for the legs across the top of the bottom piece to make a burning grate that will let the ash fall down. Then you'll need a way to remove the ash easily either a door at the front to scoop it out or you could cut the bottom off and create a grove for it to slide into so you have an ash tray. The last thing would be a sliding flue to control your air flow on the bottom air intake.
If you are drilling a cup as you were on the edge, put some water in it and rotate the drill bit slowly. A 118 degree grind on the bit is a bit shallow. Pop rivits are quick ad dirty, solid rivets much better. The seam on the pipe is called a grove seam and is 1/4 back 1/4 forward with 1/8 allowance for total of 34 inch total allowance. 3/8 either side. Taper your flat stock by 3/8 inch one end to other and you will have large end small end to slip inside one another. Small at bottom so that creosote runs inside the stove and not out onto the pipe.
I like it and if you want to keep the smoke and fire going up the chimney instead of the front. You will have to close the door. The fire is finding a better route to air from your door way. You could but a fire window in it from a stove. If you want to watch it.
This gave me an idea of doubling then stacking this design to make a tabletop pizza oven. Lower firebox and top oven with perlite insulation and pizza stone or tile. Just bigger trays. The use of foodservice stainless steel trays was better than welding or ferrous steels that would just rust away in short order.
Always thought that would be the best alternative to buying one but I have not in all my travels. Found any of those stainless steel pans that cheap. I’m thinking about trying some turkey roasters first because I could usually pick them up real cheap. Great job though
If you are OK with foraging, you can make it with recycling materials, for the Box uses Bisket tin, for the chimney use aluminum drink can stack it up into a chimney.
That design looks VERY familiar ;) Just some advice for stove's like this for small spaces, maybe leave out the flue damper, because it can increase your CO output. Maybe include a baffle to the interior instead to increase efficiency.
Nice idea. It guess though that yo pipe diameter is somewhat too big for the feeding hole. Gives less efficient draft up the pipe/chimeny. But if it works for you, all is fine Thx for the vids
Somebody showed me to keep 2 nuts on the rod I'm cutting so it unscrews and straightens the cut. Trying to get the nut on if the thread has bent is a pain. Great build.
Another great project! Super job Nick! The only one change that i would make is for the wood feed entry opening. I would make the feed door in a round configuration as opposed to square or rectangular. Example: If you make your door opening 3 1/2" or 4" opening so that could preserve the strength of your stainless steel metal under high heat and perhaps prevent warping or weakening and also come to the aid of you air draft control too!
@@HFSurvivalSchool A round hole saw that could be attached to a power drill could make fast work of it Nick. Now that's something that you wished you would have! It would make such work quite easy! The round hole saw would have to be stout enough to go through stainless though. A hole saw for that diameter and of good quality here in the states,would probably cost $27.00.
Depends on what wood you use and the size of your stove , pine once 2 hours , beech once 3 hours , but of course I slept more lol Thanks for watching Nick
Hi HF : Well done! your description of the build was very good.. I'm impressed with the results & hope you will be able to get lots of use from it. Thanks Brian 79
Cool stove, good design. I have one question about using galvanised sheeting. ( i'm not an expert, hopefully someone else will know!) I do know that you have to be really carefule welding Galv metal, as there is a toxic gas that is formed by the heat, Plenty of ventilation or breathing gear is required. Could there be toxic gas problem with the Galvanised parts of this build during use? A good roaring fire and a bed of coals can easily make the stove glow red hot. Anyone know what the relevant temps are to create the toxic gases?
I've got another version of this it consists of a piece a couple pieces of pipe and an elbow and a few four pieces of chain that you can hang from the ceiling of your tent and it kind of floats above the floor it works but I like yours better
If you want to keep the design simple, that's not needed. Our stoves in the military didn't have any ashtrays, we just turned them over in the mornings to tip out the remaining coals and ashes.
Very ingenious and well thought out. First time watching your channel and sub'd. Rare for me, usually watch more vids of channel before doing that to make sure they're legit. Well spoken and great tutorial, sir. Will be waiting for more camping adventures. By the way, what kind of pup is he?
Nice , DIY video. But if you made legs a little higher and put reflective sheet underneath. ( tin foil and polished sheet metal. Would give more heat.snd protect ground in tent.
Excellent DIY project. Well done. As icing on the cake, though, you should have shown how it packs up. I trust you'll show us that when you take out in the wild.
Keep in mind that I've only used it for a couple weeks, that being said, so far so good ruclips.net/user/postUgkxAU9pOCSV9Y5JprooHvfxTpOrt4hx8uRM . Using it at 8 ft. by 8ft. deer blind that is insulated. I have to keep the door cracked for it to get enough air to burn, but that is very likely the wood I've used. Much better quality than I expected for the price. Now if I can just take it easy in the beginning it won't be 90 degrees in my blind. All in all it seems like a keeper.
I think this is a fantastic idea! The best part is that all of the items needed can be found easily at a hardware store.
Neat idea. Could make any size. Metal sink has built in hole for flue!
That's really good idea for a bbq pit
Make sure to use steel pop rivets, not aluminum pop rivets. Aluminum won’t hold up to the heat as well. Very nice stove. Thanks for posting.
Would be easy to make it into a rocket stove by adding a plate between the two pans
If you have access to Campbell's Chunky brand soups, you can make free stove pipes with the empty cans. Simply remove both ends with a side cutting can opener. Now the rounded end can be forced into the straight end to make pipes that are four or five cans long. These cans should be pushed together as far as you can make them go and they will lock solidly. After you have made all of the segments that you need, you should press the sections together more gently and not so deep so they can be taken apart when you are ready to store them. And many of the soups are quite tasty!
Good idea. I see those types of pans in thrift stores from time to time. Thanks.
This is an AWESOME idea. With a roll up/collapsible stack it would pack extremely well. Might be a little heavy but not too bad. 10/10
Thanks for the idea.I will use this on an old double stainless steel kitchen sink to make a bigger on for what I need.Thanks for posting and again for the idea.
Nice , good luck on that!
Thanks for watching
Nick
Top secret tip, pack a new hole saw with plumbers putty. Drill mid speed. Hole saw will last for quite a few uses in stainless steel
it looks awesome i'm sure it will do the job better than the same thing at 5 times the price what weight is it by the way and i'm not trying to nock your work just be careful with the flue there seams to be a big gap around the pipe where it met's the stove and i know a guy who got carbon monoxide poisoning from a badly sealed flue, granted that was on a boat not a tent but if you have time to seal it better it could be worth the extra effort.
That was the coolest stove build I've ever seen!!! Thanks so much for sharing and blessings to you and your family 😇
Thank you very much for watching my friends!
God bless
Nick
suggestion, use a vise grip plier on both ends to drill all four corners. save time. great inform
Thank you! You too. Greetings from Yul !! Take care of yourself.
Thank you! You too!
Outstanding! I can see how it can pack down for transport . A couple personal touches or fine tuning, it will serve me well! As will the 400 bucks itll save me!! Well Done Sir!
Thank you very much , glad you like it!
Nick
very good great idea. I made one at home with a canister. The value of an industrial one is very expensive in Brazil. a hug
That is an awesome little stove. Great job. I like your stove door system.
Thank you very much my friend , means a lot to hear from you , many stuff learned from your hot tent project.
Yes I wanted to make the whole as big as possible so I ditched the hinge and had to think of something.
Hope to try it camping soon.
God bless
Nick
@@HFSurvivalSchool
. ⛇
Nice video. Great job. It looks like it should cook your meals and keep you warm. Excellent build. Thank you for sharing this with us.
Thanks fir posting this. It is the simplest and easiest to follow so far for me. Have you thought of making a swing grill? Well, if you you do and post it, I'd sure be grateful. All the best. Thanks, happy camping .
When you drill stainless steel you need to run the bit so slow that you can see it turn and cut. Otherwise you will take the edge off of the bit, running it fast, and it won't cut.
Excellent idea! And it's stainless steel!
I liked your idea that much that I created this weekend my own. It is working nice, so if my AliExpress tipi tent has been delivered I will go out for a field test!
Thanks for sharing.
Very nice stove and idea. Nice that it's so affordable and not complicated to build. Thanks for the video.
Thanks for watching and glad you like it !
Nick
Simple and easy. Nice design/ video.
Fantastic movie!
I am sold on the idea
wow! very ingenious DIY project! it looks very easy to disassemble and pack for camping too.
Yep , thanks for watching brother and thanks for your generous support !
Nick
Most hardware stores have stove pipe that comes made out of flat sheet metal. Just in case you can't find someone to shape the flat stock.
Like your door idea
Very simple build, and to last.
Thank you very much for sharing your skills.
Nice little stove you built Nick. It will come handy when it’s super cold. Thanks for sharing this project.
Yep , thanks for watching my friend ! Have a nice day
Nick
Great job. It looks like something I could use in the near future.
20$ materials
200$ skills
3$ workmanship and no skills just a little know how 😂😂😂
Great little build.
Really good job stove looks sturdy, and still lite weight. Very nice.
Thank you very much!
Nick
Love the sliding door design!
Great idea 👌
Great idea,but you need a bottom access to clean out the ash.
I know this is a silly answer but if all you want is a cooking stove or just to burn it for an hour before going to sleep if fixing up to a hot tent, then you could just let it cool off and empty it the same way you fed it in the morning before relighting it.
I would rather pay for a proper one though. That will probably warp over time. Great for a shed but I wouldn't trust it in the wilds with mine or another person or persons life/s on the line.
Great job. Excellent ingenuity. Thanks for sharing.
I love the idea to use those stainless steel trays! But I think you could make a few minor improvements to the design. If you put some of those rods you used for the legs across the top of the bottom piece to make a burning grate that will let the ash fall down. Then you'll need a way to remove the ash easily either a door at the front to scoop it out or you could cut the bottom off and create a grove for it to slide into so you have an ash tray. The last thing would be a sliding flue to control your air flow on the bottom air intake.
Adorable dog! Awesome work!
like the drill bits
Cool . We don’t get your winters but I’m going to have to build one for a backup. Thanks
If you are drilling a cup as you were on the edge, put some water in it and rotate the drill bit slowly. A 118 degree grind on the bit is a bit shallow. Pop rivits are quick ad dirty, solid rivets much better. The seam on the pipe is called a grove seam and is 1/4 back 1/4 forward with 1/8 allowance for total of 34 inch total allowance. 3/8 either side. Taper your flat stock by 3/8 inch one end to other and you will have large end small end to slip inside one another. Small at bottom so that creosote runs inside the stove and not out onto the pipe.
Ingenious! I like it.
Very nice.
I like it and if you want to keep the smoke and fire going up the chimney instead of the front. You will have to close the door. The fire is finding a better route to air from your door way. You could but a fire window in it from a stove. If you want to watch it.
Good project Nick. A lot cheaper that the store bought stoves.
Yeah A LOT cheaper
Thanks for watching
Nick
WOW!! I am impressed.
Very cool stove !!!!
Great idea!!
You can find these pans on Amazon, search for steam table pans.
This gave me an idea of doubling then stacking this design to make a tabletop pizza oven. Lower firebox and top oven with perlite insulation and pizza stone or tile. Just bigger trays. The use of foodservice stainless steel trays was better than welding or ferrous steels that would just rust away in short order.
I have never seen a man work with a hammer fast as flash, gad deammm.
Always thought that would be the best alternative to buying one but I have not in all my travels. Found any of those stainless steel pans that cheap. I’m thinking about trying some turkey roasters first because I could usually pick them up real cheap. Great job though
Thats a brilliant idea you had there fella saved you money that build has,Well done mate.
Thank you very much!
I Realy like this stove, great job!
Awesome ✌️
Dood that is awesome.
If you are OK with foraging, you can make it with recycling materials, for the Box uses Bisket tin, for the chimney use aluminum drink can stack it up into a chimney.
Drink cans would be way too thin to cope with the heat from the stove
That's awesome work!kudos!
Very good.
That design looks VERY familiar ;) Just some advice for stove's like this for small spaces, maybe leave out the flue damper, because it can increase your CO output. Maybe include a baffle to the interior instead to increase efficiency.
Great video....keep it up.
Great video!
Very cool, thank you
Nice idea. It guess though that yo pipe diameter is somewhat too big for the feeding hole. Gives less efficient draft up the pipe/chimeny.
But if it works for you, all is fine
Thx for the vids
Awesome
Brillient
Nice video Very good idea's. Never taught of using those type of containers. Nice way to make a damper too. Thanks for all the info
Thank you very much
That is really nice!!
Awesome!
Thanks!
Fala meu irmão do mato vou copiar viu. Faz tempo que eu procurava modelo como esse aí. Parabéns pelo vídeo meu amigo. Abraços binhoghryllo.
Somebody showed me to keep 2 nuts on the rod I'm cutting so it unscrews and straightens the cut. Trying to get the nut on if the thread has bent is a pain. Great build.
Another great project! Super job Nick! The only one change that i would make is for the wood feed entry opening. I would make the feed door in a round configuration as opposed to square or rectangular. Example:
If you make your door opening 3 1/2" or 4" opening so that could preserve the strength of your stainless steel metal under high heat and perhaps prevent warping or weakening and also come to the aid of you air draft control too!
Yes but making round holes is darn hard work so easier way is better way for me 😅it is very strong I doubt it will bend though.
@@HFSurvivalSchool A round hole saw that could be attached to a power drill could make fast work of it Nick. Now that's something that you wished you would have! It would make such work quite easy! The round hole saw would have to be stout enough to go through stainless though. A hole saw for that diameter and of good quality here in the states,would probably cost $27.00.
Personal preference seems. Could buy once , cry once, then get same size hole saw for flue pipe as door opening & use hole saw for both openings.
good job
Cool project!
Great idea thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching !
Awesome video--new friend here
Fantastic video friend.. Very good, thanks for the brilliant ideas from UK to.... Russia? With love
I wanted to ask, how often do you have to get up in the night and refuel and reheat the stove with a box this size? (Hot tent camping) Thanks.
Depends on what wood you use and the size of your stove , pine once 2 hours , beech once 3 hours , but of course I slept more lol
Thanks for watching
Nick
Hi HF : Well done! your description of the build was very good.. I'm impressed with the results & hope you will be able to get lots of use from it. Thanks Brian 79
Hope so too , thank you very much sir as always !
Cool stove, good design. I have one question about using galvanised sheeting. ( i'm not an expert, hopefully someone else will know!) I do know that you have to be really carefule welding Galv metal, as there is a toxic gas that is formed by the heat, Plenty of ventilation or breathing gear is required. Could there be toxic gas problem with the Galvanised parts of this build during use? A good roaring fire and a bed of coals can easily make the stove glow red hot. Anyone know what the relevant temps are to create the toxic gases?
A few drops of water help bits cut thru stainless much easier..like your idea.
Hi mate soon as work slows down I am making my own Bushbox stove hopefully lightweight as well
Good luck mate !
wonderful
Thanks
I've got another version of this it consists of a piece a couple pieces of pipe and an elbow and a few four pieces of chain that you can hang from the ceiling of your tent and it kind of floats above the floor it works but I like yours better
Nice stove, But 1 thing missing" A pull out Ashtray in the bottom to take out the burned ash, But apart from that 10-10 well done!
If you want to keep the design simple, that's not needed. Our stoves in the military didn't have any ashtrays, we just turned them over in the mornings to tip out the remaining coals and ashes.
@@vesa7069 TRY A CHEAP SHALLOW CAKE PAN FROM THE DOLLAR STORE THAT YOU CAN PULL OUT AND EMPTY. THEY COME IN EVERY SIZE. EASY TO CUT DOWN.
Lov it
I like this kind of videos. Can you make something else please? Like other bushcraft tool
Thank you , for sure !
Very ingenious and well thought out. First time watching your channel and sub'd. Rare for me, usually watch more vids of channel before doing that to make sure they're legit. Well spoken and great tutorial, sir. Will be waiting for more camping adventures. By the way, what kind of pup is he?
Thank you very much ! Hope you like it here.
Nick
Cool stove man
Thanks buddy !
Outstanding! Perfectly portable. Looking forward to your "trial by fire" hot tent test. ATB from Texas.
Thank you very much ! Will hope snow falls soon to go out there
i think they are for baking bread. i had the same type of idea but i could not cut the hole in the bread tin
Nice , DIY video. But if you made legs a little higher and put reflective sheet underneath. ( tin foil and polished sheet metal. Would give more heat.snd protect ground in tent.
This has to be used with open floor tent and when you fire it up in a small tent the last thing you'll need is more heat :)
Thanks for watching
Nick
Nice work! Looks great. Was it warm enough in your trip in the snow?
Will you send pattern to America. Very good skills.
Excellent DIY project. Well done. As icing on the cake, though, you should have shown how it packs up. I trust you'll show us that when you take out in the wild.
I was rushing and forgot that as that's the main plus of this , it breaks down and you can put stuff inside.
Thanks for watching
Nick
What material did you use exactly ?