I was just showing this vid to someone and just wanted to comment: i'm fine with affiliate links and you making money. the world needs good people making money!.
Thanks! I'll always be wary of that though. I'm not being critical of anyone doing a lot of affiliate links, we all need to make a living, but part of what we're trying to achieve is demonstrate ethical living. I just prefer to be a little cautious, when I'm benefitting from an endorsement.
I've promoted and built Rocket Mass Heaters and stoves for over 29 years I am only sorry it took an upending of the world to make people realize the value of them. Thank you for keeping these in the forefront of people's minds in these stress filled times.
How do i get the book sent to1218 Lockhart Haskell/Benton AR. 72015, i haven't been employed since my wife went to be with God. Im not a bum ,turned 62 this past August. Trying to get SSA INCOME. I absolutely absolutely will build a Rocket Mass Heater,Good Lord willing. And help everyone i can build one. Thank you for your sharing your knowledge /wisdom ,May God Bless You Sir.@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture
YT algorithm just served up your video. Thanks for this very articulate explnation. We put in a RMH in 2018. We did the half bell style. Under the mass is a chamber. It works pretty well. It's less mass, but it heats up quicker. Also, the heat slows down in the chamber. We were lucky because the room its in was a carport, so it has a cement floor and the first three feet of the walls were cinder block. The electric outlets and wires were already three feet up the walls. So far it has performed as promised. In the winter it's the place to be! The only downside is that we didn't put a finish on it. For six years it shed sand and clay all over. It was extremely messy. This summer we decided to put a lime plaster on it. Before we did that we have been reshaping it a bit. We cobbed in a wood back and a bit more protection around the barrel.. I also filled some holes my kids made. :) The only other realy "downside" that we didn't anticipate is that there is a trade-off. Because it's a rocket stove it burns wood very fast. If you stuff the burn chamber, it will be totally out in 1.5 hours. It is difficult for my wife to keep up with feeding it during the day. The tradeoff is that if you do, it will continue to radiate heat for days.
Seeing your videos I discover that to "sell" an idea, one does not have to be a pushy, annoying, noisy salesman. No, it can be done more effectively with such a smooth, gentle, relaxing and pleasant approach. Thanks for sharing your experience with this brilliant invention.
Rewatching your video. Hope you make a video every year, adding up the savings, winter comfort and durability. ❤️ 15:13 when you said they’re in the business of selling you things, this hit hard. You are exactly right. We have had 2 washers in 12 years, our grandparents parents still have their washers from the 1970! Thanks! -Jason’s Wife
I’ve been so courteous about that stone heater. Thank you so much for the explanation. I’ll never have one, but believe me, I’ll pass this on to friends and the young home buying. Much appreciated…..
I’ve spent a little time in a home with one of these and I can attest to its awesomeness! As someone who chills easily being able to literally soak up the heat felt incredible. This video was the clearest overview of a rocket mass heater I’ve ever encountered. So helpful, thank you! Hopefully it’s something we’ll be hearing a lot more about in the future. I’d be a fan of more living rooms having warming sofas :)
I'm building a house this summer. Likely going to use wool insulation, be off grid, and I'm now sold on using a rocket mass heaters. It's crazy how much more efficient everything could be if we weren't stuck in our old ways.
I have an efficient wood stove in a 30s semi ( wood warm 6 kw). It’s a bloody good stove and I installed it 15 years ago. But the entire front garden is arranged around wood storage I really wish it was 20’ longer. That’s an eight month fire everyday and overnight supply. Currently I’m thinking about waking up to find my wood stolen, or wood being such a resource as to be harder to get/ more expensive. I buy mine as a big pile from a sawmill and have been dealing with em for twenty years now. I saw it up a bit at the yard, chop it into 16” length at home and stack and split it. But I run on annual turnover, I have no rotational space so I get in April ready for October and it’s split and dry by then. Reducing my woodpile and increasing my efficiency is something I’m going to seriously rethink. Your vid has rekindled my interest in RMH. I will watch your others with renewed interest. Cheers.
This is the system our ancestors over here in Romania were using to heat their houses, their beds and to also cook on them. The romanian term is "lejancă". Back to basics it's always a win!
Have to go find the book. Wanting to build just the stove unit and connect to existing fireplace. Appreciate you taking the time to explain your build experience. Winters in the northern Ohio Valley, US can be ...brr. Needing to supplement existing heating system and also having peace of mind if that not available. Looking forward to your up coming videos!
Agree. Upon first hearing his voice, I thought "voice actor" and "He could likely make a fortune with that voice." But then he'd have to go to Hollywood or build a dang sound studio. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road started playing in my head. A complete narrative.
I’d be so happy sitting or sleeping on that thing! This skinny older women (no fat..really) is cold all the time in winter. I used to be comfortable at 70 on really cold days here in Michigan. That will stop of course. But I’m down to 68 and have hung hooks in the walkways of my home on certain rooms to creat a micro-environment. I’ve got Mr Buddy, my fireplace (hole in wall) but I do burn, and electric blankets. Snow pants I can wear comfortably moving about in my home. I’m trying…oh…and like you’ve mentioned, heat the body not the room. I got those hand and feet warmers and body stickers too for warmth. I have a Oil Radiator I bought off Amazon and it’s pretty nice! I’m pleased. I’m trying Cairn, I’m trying…..Thank you for all the recommendations you’ve provided. I like that lizard heater too you showed. I think I’m going on the hunt for one of those. Gods Blessings on you and yours dear. We all need each other, we’re all human beings…even the bad. I pray all come to Jesus, I really do. Then we’ll come together and fight as one against the evil in this world. Even if you don’t believe, we all must come together as one to survive. Anyways…just my two cents for what’s it worth. Take care.
Thank you for the great video. I just recently heard of these types of heater and with heating oil prices going through the roof its a very enticing thought. I found it very comical when u mentioned about ur old drafty house because our home was built in 1907. We've done a lot of work it, but it definitely still pulls a lot of drafts. So I was glad to hear ur comment on that. Thanks again PS that book is ordered and on its way.
Well done! I have a fascination for the rocket burning technology, your build and presentation is superb. I hope to get to Scotland eventually, since I'm half Scott via South Africa.
In Eastern Europe, we use masonry stoves to achieve the same result. Russians and Finns went to a whole other level when it comes to masonry stoves. I guess cold and limited resources does that to you.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture Hahaha. I know that in the communist times they did research wood based heating systems (Google Kuznetsov stove). You could even go to vocational school and learn how to make them. Here in Transylvania, we use a type of terracotta stove (tiled stove) that is very popular in Central Europe, but the Russians use a brick stove that gives better results. However, it takes a lot of space. Anyhow, enough stove talk. Your video about the vacuum sealing of jars was mind-blowing. I will do that from now onwards! Thank you from my heart !
I experimented outside with a few barberic rockets stoves , cool, thought no way in the house, lol. Got cold, looked at a file cabinet drawer and started making a burn chamber with firebricks. That winter the old lill stack of wood from old stove 10 yrs back was enough for the whole winter...that wood wood have been enough for less than a month with the old stove and I was cooking having tea on the barrel everyday. Yup I sucked up exhaust outside right in my mouth
Very nice video and run down of these. Thank you. Wish I could make one in this house, but I know my spouse would veto it. I do want to build a rocket stove outside and pipe it in through a window though. Obviously wouldn't be a "mass heater" in that case. One of the ideas I have is to use primarily vacuum insulated glass jars (the 32 oz, wide mouth canning/mason jars) as the main insulation and part of the structure but combined with a more insulated cob (instead of using sand, I would use fumed silica and diatamaceous earth to up the insulation beyond just using straw). The cob is to protect the glass from too fast thermal expansion and contraction and to seal up and steady the structure (and to add insulation to areas not covered by the glass jars). With most of the structure insulated by vacuum insulation, there should be a very efficient burn, and you can direct the heat more efficiently (the pipes will have to be insulated too until it comes inside). Things would be a lot easier if I could just build the dang thing inside though.
@@jacksmith4266 Lol, she has already vetoed the outside idea too. She does have a point though, that legally, it has to be a certain distance away from the main property, which would make it far less practical and more expensive to do. (But her real reasoning is more aesthetics). For the inside: Part of problem is that we spent a good chunk of change already on installing a more conventional wood stove (and which has been somewhat of a hassle, as the guy who did it, didn't do the best job and our roof leaked until recently when we re-roofed and had a rubber layer put down first on this section of the house because the pitch is lower than usual. [It was an added sunroom]).
Wish more made these. I showed a pic/name of one years ago to a welder shop. They said it was a Mercedes company. It looked like a end table with exhaust out the side.
Great to see the finished article! Have you thought about doing it as a business, building them for other people? We swear by our wood stove which is so much better than our previous heat sources but it still uses a lot of wood and only heats the one room. :)
I'm convinced there's a huge opportunity for someone to do it. Apparently a small team can build one in a few days! The issue is tooling. The right kind of mixer costs a few thousand, so whoever did it would need quite a few orders to offset the cost.
Thanks for this. Great video! Having owned a masonry stove in a previous property I can say they are hungry beasts although the heat from them is wonderful. I have bought the book and would love to install one in our current property. I’m just wondering about building regs..
I'm disappointed to be living in a modern, well insulated house now! I've been thinking of building new for a while now and the security of supply that the rmh provides is something I'm really keen on. However, it's unlikely that I'd ever get the planning permission to install (in the UK). I've currently got oil in my existing house and I don't trust that one day soon I won't be able to refill the tank. By that point, the blackouts will likely be upon us too, so no heat pump option!
I live in the UK and would like to build on in my house but need to know loopholes to building regs etc I built one in the shed of my old house and it was great. Just blow the hot air into the main house when it was needed. As that was my 1st build I thought best not build one in the house, just incase it went wrong. Of course in the house would be better and so need to know any loopholes
It cost under £1000 to build, including the concrete foundation. Maintenance is very low. Scooping a couple of handfuls of ash out of the burn tunnel once a week or so. A couple of hours, once a year, to vacuum ash out of the pipes. I've not come across any risks with it. It's safer than any heating system I've ever used.
Instead of a barrel which has to be replaced every few years as you said, could you not use an heavy steel wood furnace insert?? I live in Cape Breton Nova Scotia Canada and it gets pretty cold up here as well! Thank ou for sharing this video! I have been thinking about having one of these built for quite a few years but the cost was pretty high... Maybe now I can actually afford it!
Excellent stuff, I'm glad it's still working so well for you 🤗 Also pleased you mentioned other applications for RMH technology for upcoming projects since that was going to be my question: what else are you gonna do with it?!
In the next year I have a rocket retrofit to an aga stove, and a rocket water heater for the customer shower. Beyond that, I'm looking at a rocket forge/kiln, and I think it would be useful to incorporate a hot tub water heater into that too. It's an amazing technology.
I've tested it with a CO meter. It tests at zero. Which is more than could be said for the previous open fire or any gas cooker. Because of the way it runs, any time I open it air is sucked through the system. Even when it's not burning. I can literally partially open one of the cleanout ports while it's running, and it sucks air. It's far safer than any typical wood burner.
Can wood pellets work well in a rocket stove? That would be my major fuel source if I were to buy a Liberator. Would it present surprise complications?
I binge watched your build series while in my unheated van last night :D I'd never heard of these until I saw them on your channel. Amazing, I'm now hoping to build one when/if I finally get my plot of land! (With the book 😅)
I'm comparing it to the coal and wood fired back boiler we had installed previously. I've not measured it by season, I've measured it on a month by month basis compared to the number of bags of wood we buy monthly. I don't know the square footage, but I live in a cool temperate climate, in the highlands of Scotland.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture ok so a wood coal combo unit of any sort is going to be incredibly inefficient for burning wood. I have no idea what you were using but most of the older combo units here were at best running at 30% but a modern woodstove will be in the 70% to 80% range here. Even old dedicated wood stoves were in the range of 50%. So I don't think it's very fair to say that you are saving that much wood when compared to a woodstove when infact you weren't using a woodstove at all.
The barrel is empty. The hot gases heat the barrel, which radiates heat to the room. Then the gases flow through the pipe through the bench, heating it.
I would love to set up something like this but unfortunately I live in a 'smoke free' area. Government regulations forced me to use a less efficient defra approved stove.
Very interesting. It would be good to have a bit more detailed info on the mechanics of the design and how it generates the fuel efficiency. Is it smokey into the flue gets warm and creates a draw ? How do you get it to draw from the off ?
The chimney is above the highest part of the roof. This creates a lot of draw. In less ideal situations, some people need to prime the riser when they light it for the first time in the heating season, but mine's never needed it. There can be a small amount of smoke until it's up to temperature and burning cleanly, perhaps a few minutes. / The efficiency is from a few factors. It burns the fuel completely. No fuel is wasted as smoke, it's burned and produces heat. Secondly, it mainly produces radiant and conductive heat. This is much more efficient than convective heat, heating the air essentially, which is what most heating systems use. Third, because it burns the fuel so completely, there's no potential for dangerous creosote build up in the chimney. This allows for extracting a lot more heat from the gases. In a typical woodstove, a lot of the heat goes straight up the chimney. In a mass heater, most of that heat is stored in the mass, which slowly radiates the heat over the next few days.
This one is 43 inches, around 1.1 metres. It's wider than most mass heater benches, wider than it needs to be. I built it that way so I can turn it into a huge bed when I need to. I'm planning on having cushion pads made to size, and getting an extra one. This will go behind the back of the couch cushions, when it's in couch mode, but be added to the front of the bench on a table made to be the right height, to convert it into a massive heated bed. I'm pleased with it.
I probably missed it in the series but are the circular capped off pipe sections on the front left and 2 along the far side to allow you to take them off and sweep inside? Great series BTW!
Thanks! Yep, you're right. They're clean out ports. A lot of people cover them with a loose rock that can pop off for servicing, but I like the look of them.
Absolutely yes! If I wasn't retrofitting the heater into an existing building, I'd have used a cob wall in a central position that's a part of several rooms.
Hi, I've been thinking about this since watching everything yesterday. Could I ask you for your thoughts on this please.....our bungalow's floor level is at ground level at the front (ie normal 150mm step up into house) but the rear, including the bedroom and lounge, is over 1.5m above the lower rear garden. I don't think that she who must be obeyed would allow me to build a RMH with an integrated 'sofa' (I'd love to btw) but what do you think about theoretically sinking as much of it as possible into our solid floor and so use the long flue pipes as something like underfloor heating? I'd add a load of insulation to every face apart from the top (our floor). I've read a lot about RMHs but having not ever experienced the heat given off by them, would it be detrimental to its efficiency if it was in the floor?
It's definitely been done. I'd suggest a look through the RMH forums, I'd be amazed if there wasn't quite a lot of data on that style. It might take some digging it though.
The beauty of the mass heater is you don't have to. I run it an hour or so a day, and the mass radiates heat all day and night. From a safety perspective, I'd suggest having nothing at all running while you sleep is even safer.
I've just discovered this vid by accident. Been very interested in RMHeaters for a while but can't get off my backside to actually try and build one. Your vid has me thinking again. I have a load of questions but am going to watch your complete video series in the hope of (obviously) learning something but also to hopefully get answers to my queries. I would like to ask you one question here though.....We have a large woodburner and so I understand about it needing an air supply to replace what it uses in combustion etc. The biggest problem related to that is that it causes drafts due to the large amount of air movement. I imagine that a RMH is exactly the same BUT could the air input be piped externally to save it dragging cold air through the house?.....or is it not that noticeable? Many thanks for the vid etc 👍🙂
Glad you're finding it useful. I know people have run experiments with external air feeds. Apparently it's just not necessary. To be honest that sounds right to me, when it's running the last thing you'll worry about is a draft.
Hi, thanks for reply....I've just watched all of the build vids, very interesting. Well done! I've got to have a good think about this. In regard to my 'draft' question it's just that with the woodburner if you're sat with your back to the rest of the house (large lounge) you feel the cold air coming passed you, especially at lower leg level......anyway, I need to find some clay soil! 😂
won't the core need replacing? fire bricks fail after a while. often wondered about whole house heating. figured you could just keep adding mass-loops to the system until someone mentioned air drag to me. spose it should be ok so long the exhaust is strong enough to continue being a thermo-syphon, right?
I suppose eventually it's a possibility, but even replacing the core isn't a huge job. I could add a much larger bench to this one and still get excellent draw.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture so it wouldn’t work for the average home with multiple rooms? I am thinking some sort of heat distribution system would be needed, if it were possible at all.
Unfortunaly in the Netherlands the social house rent organisation do forbid wood stoves, even de clean ones, while justice organisations allow them causing a discrimination between people in own houses and private renters. I do think about build one in the greenhouse and be there in the winter. this is something she can do nothing about. Reason for this policy is to get green and stop also gas and all electric with sunpanels.
These don't smoke but for a few minutes in the startup and at the end, but the CO2 and H2O has to go out, and you need the draw of fresh air into the fire for it to work. There are really high tech Scandinavian pellet wood boilers that need electricity and air and only have a small exhaust, but these are expensive.
I would prefer a big classic masonry heater or a atleast a batch box rocket mass heater instead of the j-style. A masonry heater works the same but you don’t need to feed the fire. Still a really hot and effective burn, but you just load 20 kg:s of wood in once, light it and you’re done for 24 hours.
I dump a load of sticks into the fuel feed, put a piece of oily paper in, and light it. Ten minutes later I add another load of wood. When it's burned out I'm done for the day. Maybe 5 kilo of wood, at most. It's really no work or effort at all.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture Oh, that’s handy, but it must mean that you don’t have that big need for high watts for heating. Even with the best stoves 5 kg:s of wood only gives you about 15-17 kWh:s. That is something like 0,6 kW:s of heating energy in average per hour if you do that once a day. That’s only enough to keep a small, well insulated room warm in cold winter conditions.
@@martinottosson6583 I'm in the far north of Scotland. I live in a badly insulated 1930s house, with gaps around the front door. When the wind blows, the curtain billows inwards. And still, I keep the whole house comfortable on very little wood. The mass heater gets its efficiency by using more of the heat than even the best wood stoves. The gases going up the chimney are warm, not hot. The mass heater releases the heat slowly, as radiant heat. Radiant heat is much more effective than convective heat, and is why it's able to heat the house effectively long after the fire is out. The mass heater cannot be compared to any conventional wood heat, because it heats in a fundamentally different way.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture I am well aware of the principle of mass heaters, but it´s even theoretically impossible to get more than 5kWh of energy out of a kg of wood, even if you have a stove or mass heater with 100% efficiency. You might, if you made a absolute perfect burner and balanced that to an absolute perfect dimensioned mass to heat, get 90% of efficiency. If you keep your house warm with 5kg:s of wood for 24 hours, you have used 22,5 kWh of energy as a theorical maximum. Probably a bit less even since 90% is really hard to reach. That is, no matter how you put it or what creates it, not a lot of heat radiant or not. If you get -10 in outside temperature, which is normal where I live (Sweden) there´s just no way near enough. You would have to sleep on the mass to keep warm, basically. A consumption below 50 kWh in -10 C is considered low, I would say. But on the other hand, I think I have to try one myself. It´s not a big investment to atleast get a base heat in the house.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture you sure about that? eco2022 is a uk wide standard, if installed by a heras certified engineer then no building regs otherwise yes. May also void your house insurance if there was a fire. I really want one but don’t want any legal hassle or void insurance.
Could you put the barrel part outside and run the flue part inside then back out? Reason I'm asking is because I rent and landlords are ruled by laws, they sent Heatas out about my multi fuel fire and condemned it for not being in the fireplace to some some rule the self appointed arseholes had made up. Later I found out their "engineer" wasn't qualified and had been fired.
You didn’t mention Building Standards (Regulations/ Codes for those not in Scotland) As far as I recall from my days as an Architect, this would not be permissible, and probably illegal, and void your insurance. Please set me straight if I am mistaken.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture Who is opposed, and who is angry? I love rocket mass heaters. Regulations are there to protect folk. As you said, a poorly built one is potentially dangerous. It would be difficult, though not impossible, to regulate the design and construction. As combustion fuel as a prime source of heating is likely to become not allowed, I don’t see this happening. This is a real shame, as it is very appropriate in many rural areas. The CO2 it adds is negligible. (Though growing trees, then burying under clay soil to capture the carbon is better
No. No I don't. It's a colossal piece of monolithic masonry. A typical mass heater bench, made in cob, is typically 6 tons. This is significantly bigger.
Whilst I think these are great, not sure about your claims of efficiency. ( please prove me wrong!) Perhaps over the worst open fire. But a good wood stove is, say 60% efficient. I guess yours is maximum 90%. So some facts to back this up please. How much fuel do you use. Did it replace a wood stove, so you have a comparison. How big and well insulated is your house.
All these challenges of the efficiency of a mass heater I think are because of a misunderstanding. A standard wood stove only heats when it's running. A mass heater heats for days after it's been run, and you have the option of sitting on the mass for conductive warming, which is something you can't do with a conventional stove. Comparing a wood stove with a mass heater isn't a level comparison, they function differently.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture point taken. Yes apples and oranges, but both still fruit. It would be good to see an episode giving the fuel use over winter. And details of your house. I run a small wood stove, mainly just for a few hours in the evening. My house is all brick, including internal wall so holds the heat quite well. Insulated cavities and good loft insulation. I burn trimmings from the garden, plus I am trying out wood brickettes, I got a one ton bag for £100, and that will last a winter, supplemented with found wood.
I don't think I've seen anyone try so hard to fill a few minutes. Talk talk talk talk talk and no good info other than buy a book. Props to the hustle I guess
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture yeah you aren't selling anything but clearly you're trying to game the RUclips algorithm that's what it seems like anyway. Thanks for sharing the information if I wasn't living in a house built in the last 10 years then I'd consider this as an option. Perhaps there'll be a great apocalypse and I can live in the woods and that book would come in handy 👍
I was just showing this vid to someone and just wanted to comment: i'm fine with affiliate links and you making money. the world needs good people making money!.
Thanks! I'll always be wary of that though. I'm not being critical of anyone doing a lot of affiliate links, we all need to make a living, but part of what we're trying to achieve is demonstrate ethical living. I just prefer to be a little cautious, when I'm benefitting from an endorsement.
I've promoted and built Rocket Mass Heaters and stoves for over 29 years I am only sorry it took an upending of the world to make people realize the value of them. Thank you for keeping these in the forefront of people's minds in these stress filled times.
I have several planned, they're amazing.
How do i get the book sent to1218 Lockhart Haskell/Benton AR. 72015, i haven't been employed since my wife went to be with God. Im not a bum ,turned 62 this past August. Trying to get SSA INCOME. I absolutely absolutely will build a Rocket Mass Heater,Good Lord willing. And help everyone i can build one. Thank you for your sharing your knowledge /wisdom ,May God Bless You Sir.@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture
So glad this got popular on reddit, this was very very interesting. Thanks for doing this
Ah, that would explain the sudden increase in views!
YT algorithm just served up your video. Thanks for this very articulate explnation. We put in a RMH in 2018. We did the half bell style. Under the mass is a chamber. It works pretty well. It's less mass, but it heats up quicker. Also, the heat slows down in the chamber. We were lucky because the room its in was a carport, so it has a cement floor and the first three feet of the walls were cinder block. The electric outlets and wires were already three feet up the walls. So far it has performed as promised. In the winter it's the place to be! The only downside is that we didn't put a finish on it. For six years it shed sand and clay all over. It was extremely messy. This summer we decided to put a lime plaster on it. Before we did that we have been reshaping it a bit. We cobbed in a wood back and a bit more protection around the barrel.. I also filled some holes my kids made. :) The only other realy "downside" that we didn't anticipate is that there is a trade-off. Because it's a rocket stove it burns wood very fast. If you stuff the burn chamber, it will be totally out in 1.5 hours. It is difficult for my wife to keep up with feeding it during the day. The tradeoff is that if you do, it will continue to radiate heat for days.
Fantastic! I have several more planned.
Seeing your videos I discover that to "sell" an idea, one does not have to be a pushy, annoying, noisy salesman. No, it can be done more effectively with such a smooth, gentle, relaxing and pleasant approach. Thanks for sharing your experience with this brilliant invention.
Thank you.
Rewatching your video. Hope you make a video every year, adding up the savings, winter comfort and durability. ❤️
15:13 when you said they’re in the business of selling you things, this hit hard. You are exactly right. We have had 2 washers in 12 years, our grandparents parents still have their washers from the 1970!
Thanks!
-Jason’s Wife
Yep. The efficiency fallacy, where something is deemed sustainable because it's 3% more efficient, despite needing replacing every year.
I watched all the episodes back to back. 👍
Fantastic!
I'm chuffed that you have covered this subject. I'll be following up with the book. Good info and thanks for sharing.
Thank you.
Am converting a light truck into a mobile home. Been doing alot of thinking about what heating system to use. Now I know👌
I finally got the book!! Thank you for your video.❤
Thanks!
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture it is a great read. I think I can build one too. (I’m in the NorthEast Kingdom. (VT)
I’ve been so courteous about that stone heater. Thank you so much for the explanation. I’ll never have one, but believe me, I’ll pass this on to friends and the young home buying. Much appreciated…..
Thank you.
I’ve spent a little time in a home with one of these and I can attest to its awesomeness! As someone who chills easily being able to literally soak up the heat felt incredible. This video was the clearest overview of a rocket mass heater I’ve ever encountered. So helpful, thank you! Hopefully it’s something we’ll be hearing a lot more about in the future. I’d be a fan of more living rooms having warming sofas :)
Thanks!
I just finished all of your rocket mass heater videos. I really appreciated and enjoyed them. Thank you for sharing your experience.
Thanks for your kind words, they're appreciated!
I'm building a house this summer. Likely going to use wool insulation, be off grid, and I'm now sold on using a rocket mass heaters. It's crazy how much more efficient everything could be if we weren't stuck in our old ways.
Sheep totally mess up the environment
I have an efficient wood stove in a 30s semi ( wood warm 6 kw). It’s a bloody good stove and I installed it 15 years ago. But the entire front garden is arranged around wood storage I really wish it was 20’ longer. That’s an eight month fire everyday and overnight supply. Currently I’m thinking about waking up to find my wood stolen, or wood being such a resource as to be harder to get/ more expensive. I buy mine as a big pile from a sawmill and have been dealing with em for twenty years now. I saw it up a bit at the yard, chop it into 16” length at home and stack and split it. But I run on annual turnover, I have no rotational space so I get in April ready for October and it’s split and dry by then. Reducing my woodpile and increasing my efficiency is something I’m going to seriously rethink. Your vid has rekindled my interest in RMH. I will watch your others with renewed interest. Cheers.
Glad you found it useful. I'd never be without a RMH now.
This is the system our ancestors over here in Romania were using to heat their houses, their beds and to also cook on them. The romanian term is "lejancă". Back to basics it's always a win!
Very similar yes.
Inspirational...
Beautiful heater couch!
Thankyou lovely man.
Thank you!
You're a genius! Thank you for working so hard to help others.
Wow, thank you!
This was wonderful! You are a very good teacher. Thank you for sharing your gifts. :)
Thank you!
Have to go find the book. Wanting to build just the stove unit and connect to existing fireplace. Appreciate you taking the time to explain your build experience. Winters in the northern Ohio Valley, US can be ...brr. Needing to supplement existing heating system and also having peace of mind if that not available. Looking forward to your up coming videos!
Just the core and bell is a pretty simple build, and you can stack mass like stone or masonry around the bell will really help store some heat.
awesome, well done. these need more attention!
Your voice is pure ASMR…….
Thank you!
Agree. Upon first hearing his voice, I thought "voice actor" and "He could likely make a fortune with that voice." But then he'd have to go to Hollywood or build a dang sound studio. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road started playing in my head. A complete narrative.
I’d be so happy sitting or sleeping on that thing! This skinny older women (no fat..really) is cold all the time in winter. I used to be comfortable at 70 on really cold days here in Michigan. That will stop of course. But I’m down to 68 and have hung hooks in the walkways of my home on certain rooms to creat a micro-environment. I’ve got Mr Buddy, my fireplace (hole in wall) but I do burn, and electric blankets. Snow pants I can wear comfortably moving about in my home. I’m trying…oh…and like you’ve mentioned, heat the body not the room. I got those hand and feet warmers and body stickers too for warmth. I have a Oil Radiator I bought off Amazon and it’s pretty nice! I’m pleased. I’m trying Cairn, I’m trying…..Thank you for all the recommendations you’ve provided. I like that lizard heater too you showed. I think I’m going on the hunt for one of those. Gods Blessings on you and yours dear. We all need each other, we’re all human beings…even the bad. I pray all come to Jesus, I really do. Then we’ll come together and fight as one against the evil in this world. Even if you don’t believe, we all must come together as one to survive. Anyways…just my two cents for what’s it worth. Take care.
Thank you.
Liked, commented and subscribed....
Thanks!
Excellent video.
Thanks!
Thank you for the great video. I just recently heard of these types of heater and with heating oil prices going through the roof its a very enticing thought. I found it very comical when u mentioned about ur old drafty house because our home was built in 1907. We've done a lot of work it, but it definitely still pulls a lot of drafts. So I was glad to hear ur comment on that. Thanks again PS that book is ordered and on its way.
Glad it was helpful!
Well done! I have a fascination for the rocket burning technology, your build and presentation is superb. I hope to get to Scotland eventually, since I'm half Scott via South Africa.
Thank you! Genuinely appreciated.
Cake is always good 👍
Indeed!
In Eastern Europe, we use masonry stoves to achieve the same result. Russians and Finns went to a whole other level when it comes to masonry stoves. I guess cold and limited resources does that to you.
Apparently various heads of state ran competitions to innovate new heating technologies.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture Hahaha. I know that in the communist times they did research wood based heating systems (Google Kuznetsov stove). You could even go to vocational school and learn how to make them. Here in Transylvania, we use a type of terracotta stove (tiled stove) that is very popular in Central Europe, but the Russians use a brick stove that gives better results. However, it takes a lot of space. Anyhow, enough stove talk. Your video about the vacuum sealing of jars was mind-blowing. I will do that from now onwards! Thank you from my heart !
@@CyberLord14 thank you
Well explained and to the point,good video.
Thank you!
I experimented outside with a few barberic rockets stoves , cool, thought no way in the house, lol. Got cold, looked at a file cabinet drawer and started making a burn chamber with firebricks. That winter the old lill stack of wood from old stove 10 yrs back was enough for the whole winter...that wood wood have been enough for less than a month with the old stove and I was cooking having tea on the barrel everyday. Yup I sucked up exhaust outside right in my mouth
Very nice video and run down of these. Thank you. Wish I could make one in this house, but I know my spouse would veto it. I do want to build a rocket stove outside and pipe it in through a window though. Obviously wouldn't be a "mass heater" in that case.
One of the ideas I have is to use primarily vacuum insulated glass jars (the 32 oz, wide mouth canning/mason jars) as the main insulation and part of the structure but combined with a more insulated cob (instead of using sand, I would use fumed silica and diatamaceous earth to up the insulation beyond just using straw). The cob is to protect the glass from too fast thermal expansion and contraction and to seal up and steady the structure (and to add insulation to areas not covered by the glass jars).
With most of the structure insulated by vacuum insulation, there should be a very efficient burn, and you can direct the heat more efficiently (the pipes will have to be insulated too until it comes inside).
Things would be a lot easier if I could just build the dang thing inside though.
What might happen if you show this video to your spouse and have a conversation about it
@@jacksmith4266 Lol, she has already vetoed the outside idea too. She does have a point though, that legally, it has to be a certain distance away from the main property, which would make it far less practical and more expensive to do. (But her real reasoning is more aesthetics).
For the inside: Part of problem is that we spent a good chunk of change already on installing a more conventional wood stove (and which has been somewhat of a hassle, as the guy who did it, didn't do the best job and our roof leaked until recently when we re-roofed and had a rubber layer put down first on this section of the house because the pitch is lower than usual. [It was an added sunroom]).
There is a camping rocket stove that generates enough power to charge a phone, so - stick powered! 👍 😎
Yep, amazing technology.
Wish more made these. I showed a pic/name of one years ago to a welder shop. They said it was a Mercedes company. It looked like a end table with exhaust out the side.
Simply brilliant.
Thanks!
👍 Thanks for sharing.
Thank you too
Great to see the finished article! Have you thought about doing it as a business, building them for other people? We swear by our wood stove which is so much better than our previous heat sources but it still uses a lot of wood and only heats the one room. :)
I'm convinced there's a huge opportunity for someone to do it. Apparently a small team can build one in a few days! The issue is tooling. The right kind of mixer costs a few thousand, so whoever did it would need quite a few orders to offset the cost.
Thanks for this. Great video! Having owned a masonry stove in a previous property I can say they are hungry beasts although the heat from them is wonderful. I have bought the book and would love to install one in our current property. I’m just wondering about building regs..
I suspect quite a few are quietly installed in place of a wood burner, without permission.
I'm disappointed to be living in a modern, well insulated house now! I've been thinking of building new for a while now and the security of supply that the rmh provides is something I'm really keen on. However, it's unlikely that I'd ever get the planning permission to install (in the UK). I've currently got oil in my existing house and I don't trust that one day soon I won't be able to refill the tank. By that point, the blackouts will likely be upon us too, so no heat pump option!
Personally, I'd get the most basic, cheap wood burner available, get it HETAS registered, then take it out and install a mass heater.
Yeah they’re pretty awesome but try to get your insurance co on board
God Bless you dear….✝️
Thank you
I live in the UK and would like to build on in my house but need to know loopholes to building regs etc
I built one in the shed of my old house and it was great.
Just blow the hot air into the main house when it was needed.
As that was my 1st build I thought best not build one in the house, just incase it went wrong.
Of course in the house would be better and so need to know any loopholes
I'm curious about TCO, maintenance costs, risks, etc.
It cost under £1000 to build, including the concrete foundation. Maintenance is very low. Scooping a couple of handfuls of ash out of the burn tunnel once a week or so. A couple of hours, once a year, to vacuum ash out of the pipes.
I've not come across any risks with it. It's safer than any heating system I've ever used.
Instead of a barrel which has to be replaced every few years as you said, could you not use an heavy steel wood furnace insert?? I live in Cape Breton Nova Scotia Canada and it gets pretty cold up here as well! Thank ou for sharing this video! I have been thinking about having one of these built for quite a few years but the cost was pretty high... Maybe now I can actually afford it!
A lot of people use all kinds of fancy steel for the drum. Personally I'm not too worried about it, an oil drum lasts decades.
Excellent stuff, I'm glad it's still working so well for you 🤗 Also pleased you mentioned other applications for RMH technology for upcoming projects since that was going to be my question: what else are you gonna do with it?!
In the next year I have a rocket retrofit to an aga stove, and a rocket water heater for the customer shower. Beyond that, I'm looking at a rocket forge/kiln, and I think it would be useful to incorporate a hot tub water heater into that too. It's an amazing technology.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture Wow, I'll look forward to seeing how all that looks 🤩
Is it HETAS compliant? Do you have a carbon monoxide alarm in the room just in case!
I've tested it with a CO meter. It tests at zero. Which is more than could be said for the previous open fire or any gas cooker.
Because of the way it runs, any time I open it air is sucked through the system. Even when it's not burning. I can literally partially open one of the cleanout ports while it's running, and it sucks air. It's far safer than any typical wood burner.
Can wood pellets work well in a rocket stove? That would be my major fuel source if I were to buy a Liberator. Would it present surprise complications?
As far as I know, the liberator has an attachment specifically for burning pellets.
I binge watched your build series while in my unheated van last night :D I'd never heard of these until I saw them on your channel. Amazing, I'm now hoping to build one when/if I finally get my plot of land! (With the book 😅)
Fantastic! It's a technology I wish more people knew about.
I'm extremely curious to know what you coated the barrel with to withstand the heat.
It's just a little cooking oil.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture No kidding? Doesn't your barrel burn it off?
What type of wood stove are you comparing your wood useage to?
How much wood are you using to heat what square footage in what climate?
I'm comparing it to the coal and wood fired back boiler we had installed previously. I've not measured it by season, I've measured it on a month by month basis compared to the number of bags of wood we buy monthly. I don't know the square footage, but I live in a cool temperate climate, in the highlands of Scotland.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture ok so a wood coal combo unit of any sort is going to be incredibly inefficient for burning wood. I have no idea what you were using but most of the older combo units here were at best running at 30% but a modern woodstove will be in the 70% to 80% range here. Even old dedicated wood stoves were in the range of 50%.
So I don't think it's very fair to say that you are saving that much wood when compared to a woodstove when infact you weren't using a woodstove at all.
Can you tell me:
Is there any reason one couldn't route the heating pipe under a floor for a radiant system?
It's certainly been done, yes. It works very well.
Could you explaim a bit more about How the Barraleis filled. Or is it empty?
The barrel is empty. The hot gases heat the barrel, which radiates heat to the room. Then the gases flow through the pipe through the bench, heating it.
Watch his build video
How do you cut the smaller pieces of wood? I have a ton of it around my property, but a chainsaw isn't a great tool for a lot of the smaller pieces.
I tend to use loppers.
I would love to set up something like this but unfortunately I live in a 'smoke free' area.
Government regulations forced me to use a less efficient defra approved stove.
I suspect a lot of people just switch to a mass heater anyway, and just keep quiet about it.
I've got an old section of 6 " glazed clay underground drainage pipe, do you think that would be any good as a riser? cheers.
Very interesting.
It would be good to have a bit more detailed info on the mechanics of the design and how it generates the fuel efficiency.
Is it smokey into the flue gets warm and creates a draw ? How do you get it to draw from the off ?
The chimney is above the highest part of the roof. This creates a lot of draw. In less ideal situations, some people need to prime the riser when they light it for the first time in the heating season, but mine's never needed it.
There can be a small amount of smoke until it's up to temperature and burning cleanly, perhaps a few minutes. /
The efficiency is from a few factors. It burns the fuel completely. No fuel is wasted as smoke, it's burned and produces heat. Secondly, it mainly produces radiant and conductive heat. This is much more efficient than convective heat, heating the air essentially, which is what most heating systems use. Third, because it burns the fuel so completely, there's no potential for dangerous creosote build up in the chimney. This allows for extracting a lot more heat from the gases. In a typical woodstove, a lot of the heat goes straight up the chimney. In a mass heater, most of that heat is stored in the mass, which slowly radiates the heat over the next few days.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture - Great, thanks for taking the time to explain that . Cheers.
Do you have to declare it to your house insurance (UK)?
Thanks.
It might be peculiar to our provider, but they've never asked what we do for heat.
Hello. What is the measurement on the depth of the couch? It seems pretty deep, are you happy with the dimension this way? Thanks!
This one is 43 inches, around 1.1 metres. It's wider than most mass heater benches, wider than it needs to be. I built it that way so I can turn it into a huge bed when I need to. I'm planning on having cushion pads made to size, and getting an extra one. This will go behind the back of the couch cushions, when it's in couch mode, but be added to the front of the bench on a table made to be the right height, to convert it into a massive heated bed. I'm pleased with it.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture Good stuff, thank you!
I probably missed it in the series but are the circular capped off pipe sections on the front left and 2 along the far side to allow you to take them off and sweep inside? Great series BTW!
Thanks!
Yep, you're right. They're clean out ports. A lot of people cover them with a loose rock that can pop off for servicing, but I like the look of them.
Do you have to sweep the flue?
It gets vacuumed once a year to remove ash.
would this work using a wall as mass instead of a bench?
Absolutely yes! If I wasn't retrofitting the heater into an existing building, I'd have used a cob wall in a central position that's a part of several rooms.
awesome deep dive. I am sold. Going to build one in my 25 ft yurt. How big is your house?
Fairly modest, it's a single floor cottage. But a mass heater will heat a yurt beautifully.
Hi, I've been thinking about this since watching everything yesterday. Could I ask you for your thoughts on this please.....our bungalow's floor level is at ground level at the front (ie normal 150mm step up into house) but the rear, including the bedroom and lounge, is over 1.5m above the lower rear garden. I don't think that she who must be obeyed would allow me to build a RMH with an integrated 'sofa' (I'd love to btw) but what do you think about theoretically sinking as much of it as possible into our solid floor and so use the long flue pipes as something like underfloor heating? I'd add a load of insulation to every face apart from the top (our floor). I've read a lot about RMHs but having not ever experienced the heat given off by them, would it be detrimental to its efficiency if it was in the floor?
It's definitely been done. I'd suggest a look through the RMH forums, I'd be amazed if there wasn't quite a lot of data on that style. It might take some digging it though.
What about safety? I could leave my central heating on all night, could I do the same with this?
The beauty of the mass heater is you don't have to. I run it an hour or so a day, and the mass radiates heat all day and night. From a safety perspective, I'd suggest having nothing at all running while you sleep is even safer.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture thanks for the reply.
@@MrOrbitzHD No worries!
I've just discovered this vid by accident. Been very interested in RMHeaters for a while but can't get off my backside to actually try and build one. Your vid has me thinking again. I have a load of questions but am going to watch your complete video series in the hope of (obviously) learning something but also to hopefully get answers to my queries. I would like to ask you one question here though.....We have a large woodburner and so I understand about it needing an air supply to replace what it uses in combustion etc. The biggest problem related to that is that it causes drafts due to the large amount of air movement. I imagine that a RMH is exactly the same BUT could the air input be piped externally to save it dragging cold air through the house?.....or is it not that noticeable? Many thanks for the vid etc 👍🙂
Glad you're finding it useful. I know people have run experiments with external air feeds. Apparently it's just not necessary. To be honest that sounds right to me, when it's running the last thing you'll worry about is a draft.
Hi, thanks for reply....I've just watched all of the build vids, very interesting. Well done! I've got to have a good think about this. In regard to my 'draft' question it's just that with the woodburner if you're sat with your back to the rest of the house (large lounge) you feel the cold air coming passed you, especially at lower leg level......anyway, I need to find some clay soil! 😂
won't the core need replacing? fire bricks fail after a while. often wondered about whole house heating. figured you could just keep adding mass-loops to the system until someone mentioned air drag to me. spose it should be ok so long the exhaust is strong enough to continue being a thermo-syphon, right?
I suppose eventually it's a possibility, but even replacing the core isn't a huge job.
I could add a much larger bench to this one and still get excellent draw.
I don’t understand how you don’t need rads. How does it heat separate rooms?
I open the connecting door and the heat evens out.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture so it wouldn’t work for the average home with multiple rooms?
I am thinking some sort of heat distribution system would be needed, if it were possible at all.
Unfortunaly in the Netherlands the social house rent organisation do forbid wood stoves, even de clean ones, while justice organisations allow them causing a discrimination between people in own houses and private renters. I do think about build one in the greenhouse and be there in the winter. this is something she can do nothing about. Reason for this policy is to get green and stop also gas and all electric with sunpanels.
Is there a type of pipeless, smokeless, efficient wood heater that does not smoke?
Every wood burner needs a flue.
These don't smoke but for a few minutes in the startup and at the end, but the CO2 and H2O has to go out, and you need the draw of fresh air into the fire for it to work.
There are really high tech Scandinavian pellet wood boilers that need electricity and air and only have a small exhaust, but these are expensive.
I would prefer a big classic masonry heater or a atleast a batch box rocket mass heater instead of the j-style. A masonry heater works the same but you don’t need to feed the fire. Still a really hot and effective burn, but you just load 20 kg:s of wood in once, light it and you’re done for 24 hours.
I dump a load of sticks into the fuel feed, put a piece of oily paper in, and light it. Ten minutes later I add another load of wood. When it's burned out I'm done for the day. Maybe 5 kilo of wood, at most. It's really no work or effort at all.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture Oh, that’s handy, but it must mean that you don’t have that big need for high watts for heating. Even with the best stoves 5 kg:s of wood only gives you about 15-17 kWh:s. That is something like 0,6 kW:s of heating energy in average per hour if you do that once a day. That’s only enough to keep a small, well insulated room warm in cold winter conditions.
@@martinottosson6583 I'm in the far north of Scotland. I live in a badly insulated 1930s house, with gaps around the front door. When the wind blows, the curtain billows inwards. And still, I keep the whole house comfortable on very little wood.
The mass heater gets its efficiency by using more of the heat than even the best wood stoves. The gases going up the chimney are warm, not hot. The mass heater releases the heat slowly, as radiant heat. Radiant heat is much more effective than convective heat, and is why it's able to heat the house effectively long after the fire is out. The mass heater cannot be compared to any conventional wood heat, because it heats in a fundamentally different way.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture I am well aware of the principle of mass heaters, but it´s even theoretically impossible to get more than 5kWh of energy out of a kg of wood, even if you have a stove or mass heater with 100% efficiency. You might, if you made a absolute perfect burner and balanced that to an absolute perfect dimensioned mass to heat, get 90% of efficiency. If you keep your house warm with 5kg:s of wood for 24 hours, you have used 22,5 kWh of energy as a theorical maximum. Probably a bit less even since 90% is really hard to reach. That is, no matter how you put it or what creates it, not a lot of heat radiant or not. If you get -10 in outside temperature, which is normal where I live (Sweden) there´s just no way near enough. You would have to sleep on the mass to keep warm, basically. A consumption below 50 kWh in -10 C is considered low, I would say.
But on the other hand, I think I have to try one myself. It´s not a big investment to atleast get a base heat in the house.
@@martinottosson6583 Build one. I promise you'll love it.
CAN SOMEONE PLEASE HELP ME AND INSTALL ONE OF THESE HEATERS. THANKYOU.
Hi did you get on with eco2022 and building regs for this install?
It's not applicable to Scotland.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture you sure about that? eco2022 is a uk wide standard, if installed by a heras certified engineer then no building regs otherwise yes. May also void your house insurance if there was a fire. I really want one but don’t want any legal hassle or void insurance.
@@clivefrancis3546 even hetas registered installation isn't compulsory in Scotland.
Could you put the barrel part outside and run the flue part inside then back out? Reason I'm asking is because I rent and landlords are ruled by laws, they sent Heatas out about my multi fuel fire and condemned it for not being in the fireplace to some some rule the self appointed arseholes had made up. Later I found out their "engineer" wasn't qualified and had been fired.
I know of people doing it with yurts and so on, so it can definitely be done.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture thanks
How big is the house its heating? Also how many floors?
One floor, a three bedroom family home.
Hmmm watching this makes me think of running some copper water line through this into a water tank that could cycle through for hot water or a bath.
That would work, but water heating in closed pipes can be extremely dangerous. I have a rocket stove planned with a water heater though.
You didn’t mention Building Standards (Regulations/ Codes for those not in Scotland)
As far as I recall from my days as an Architect, this would not be permissible, and probably illegal, and void your insurance.
Please set me straight if I am mistaken.
Why are people who are opposed to mass heaters, always so angry?
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture
Who is opposed, and who is angry?
I love rocket mass heaters.
Regulations are there to protect folk. As you said, a poorly built one is potentially dangerous. It would be difficult, though not impossible, to regulate the design and construction. As combustion fuel as a prime source of heating is likely to become not allowed, I don’t see this happening. This is a real shame, as it is very appropriate in many rural areas. The CO2 it adds is negligible. (Though growing trees, then burying under clay soil to capture the carbon is better
8 to 10 ton is a hugely exaggerated amount don't you think?
No. No I don't. It's a colossal piece of monolithic masonry. A typical mass heater bench, made in cob, is typically 6 tons. This is significantly bigger.
A seventy year old woman could manage the firewood easily, it seems.
A lot would depend on the individual, I expect. But it's a lot less work than a conventional wood stove.
They should build these in Ukraine
Whilst I think these are great, not sure about your claims of efficiency. ( please prove me wrong!)
Perhaps over the worst open fire. But a good wood stove is, say 60% efficient.
I guess yours is maximum 90%.
So some facts to back this up please.
How much fuel do you use.
Did it replace a wood stove, so you have a comparison.
How big and well insulated is your house.
All these challenges of the efficiency of a mass heater I think are because of a misunderstanding. A standard wood stove only heats when it's running. A mass heater heats for days after it's been run, and you have the option of sitting on the mass for conductive warming, which is something you can't do with a conventional stove. Comparing a wood stove with a mass heater isn't a level comparison, they function differently.
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture point taken. Yes apples and oranges, but both still fruit.
It would be good to see an episode giving the fuel use over winter. And details of your house.
I run a small wood stove, mainly just for a few hours in the evening. My house is all brick, including internal wall so holds the heat quite well. Insulated cavities and good loft insulation. I burn trimmings from the garden, plus I am trying out wood brickettes, I got a one ton bag for £100, and that will last a winter, supplemented with found wood.
I don't think I've seen anyone try so hard to fill a few minutes. Talk talk talk talk talk and no good info other than buy a book. Props to the hustle I guess
Hustle?
@@CairnOfDunnCroftPermaculture yeah you aren't selling anything but clearly you're trying to game the RUclips algorithm that's what it seems like anyway. Thanks for sharing the information if I wasn't living in a house built in the last 10 years then I'd consider this as an option. Perhaps there'll be a great apocalypse and I can live in the woods and that book would come in handy 👍
"Game the youtube algorithm"?
As in..... Encourage people to watch? You know that's literally what RUclips is, right?
Learn how to convey your talking points in less than 20 minutes. This video shows no information about how to build the thing
. There's a link at the end of the video to the build playlist.