For everyone who wants plans, I would recommend this site, free detailed plans for many many stoves of various sizes, some even small enough to go on a strong wooden floor... eng.stove.ru/products/otopitelno_varochnyie_pechi_ovik/ovik The stove from this video is a very similar design to one built by FireSpeaking, called the "cabin stove" though I don't think they offer plans anymore...
Thank you for this. Without speaking Russian, it has been a bit difficult to find which of the ovik models are the ones small enough for a wooden floor.
The garage at our farm was broken into two nights ago and all the tools that belonged to my grandfather were stolen. For some reason watching you work in this video gives me peace. You make me think of what he might have been when he was a young man. Thank you.
For anyone wondering about the design. (It is not clear to most people who don't have experience in building these.) The flames and gasses rise up in the firebox and hit the cooktop "ceiling." They are then pulled to "our right" over the small brick wall laping across more of the iron cooktop. (This can be seen when he lifts up part of the cooktop.) The gasses move down the thin channel on the right of the firebox and actually pass under the firebox. So, in summary, the flame/ gasses go up, (hit cooktop,) then "right," under the cooktop, then straight down, then " turn left to go under the firebox," then up to chimney and out of the house. The most important thing in making this stove is the "damper" inside the main firebox that allows the flame and hot gasses to move directly into the chimney for the first 10 minutes when the "system is cold." Once the chimney is hot, the damper on the left of the firebox can be closed and there will be "enough pull" in the system to pull the gasses up and over the brick wall now "to the right," and then down, and then left under the firebox, and then out. Without this ability to "heat everything up" FIRST, a stove that asks the gasses to "do straight down" will smoke your house out and be unusable.
I just want to say how much i appreciate this channel, I spent 3 yrs in Japan building 2x4 western style homes in the 90's, I have always wanted to go back and see how the Japanese built their traditional homes from start to finish. I was able to view different homes being built the traditional way as a passerby to and from the train station on the way to work, but none to this level of detail and exact precision that the Japanese master carpenters exhibit on a daily basis. Thank you Mr Chickadee for showing us your passion.... hope you keep it going.
as a bricklayer these old methods of mortar /clay slurry/and insulation etc are interesting , Remember guys you have the option of 10% lime mixed with building sand and water to make lime mprtar(instead of cement mortar) if you live in a built up area and dont have access to clay to make slurry and wish to practice your brick bonds and building walls or stove projects like this and repeat until you get it right.. When your work is finished you can crit it and when youre ready to try again just pull it down the next day and brush the bricks dry and wash bricks clean in bucket of water . You can then repeat and practice til youre satisfied with your brickwork project. IMPORTANT don't leave project for longer than 3 weeks or it will set hard and cure as cement and bricks. NB. this doesn't apply to slurry insulation. this is a very clean practical way to practice brickwork in your garden or patio. using the same sand and lime repeatedly. jiust break the project down on completion then use a hard scrubbing brush and separate sand and bricks into two clean piles. enjoy
Mr. Chickadee never fails to impress. If the year was 1840 and we were settling the land I would pick this guy to be on my team. Amazing to watch a video without rambling or clickbait in 2019.
quiet .. in 1800 we are returning .. 😁😱 thanks to all the bastards in the government .. who squander on weapons and give a damn about middle and lower class citizens.
It might take that thing a bit to get warmed up on a cold morning but once it does, I'll bet that sweet baby can throw the heat! My father built a large scale version of this in the basement of our house! I'm sure you were glad for yours last winter! Thanks for the fun video!
Three different mixes in the video, 1. Vermiculite, clay slurry (used as insulation layer under heater 2. Clay slurry, sand (used for mortar between bricks) 3. Clay slurry, sand, wood ashes, wool (used as fireproof layer inside firebox)
Sir, you made your own concrete out of clay dirt, haven't seen that process since I was a child in the coal fields of West Virginia. Thanks for taking me back.
Great video my son was in the peace corp in Paraguay and on a three week visit my wife and I got to help him help rural folks make fagones(cook stoves) We used clay. sand and cow manure as mortar. The cow manure made the motar really sticky and helped prevent cracking. We used unfired clay bricks and constructed it a lot like yours. We made the chimney bigger and taller so we could put in an oven box. He revisited his site 6 years later and the stoves he helped build still worked fine, Did you ever look at my you tube on building my log cabin? log cabin building-tour Your work is much more refined Love your work Dave
Hey mr chickadee If I’m not mistaken I subscribed 4 years ago, I’m 14 now, and that’s when I learned carpentry. I started making a guitar pic with just an old knife and sand paper. Now, I specialise myself in carving. I really thank you for these videos that you’ve posted. These were one of the sources of my inspiration. God bless!!
Salvador Elmer Cabotage III. Way to go, young man! As we've just seen from Mr Chickadee, making things is something people were "made to do!". And some people are 'master Craftsman'; the stuff they make serves their House well for years. Sounds like you're growing into that mastery, too. Keep having fun with it! Rick Bonner, Pennsyltucky
@Salvador Elmer Cabotage III: Son, I'm so proud of you for wanting to give back to the person who gave to you. That's an extremely rare and valuable trait to have. You're extremely special! Don't ever change. You will contribute tremendously to the world.
Salvador Elmer Cabotage III Young Man, you have taken a large step into a great big world in what you wrote. Learning by doing is quickly becoming a lost art, but you have decided to do just that and most importantly you thanked the person that inspired you. I know by experience that you will be successful in every thing you do. The measure of a Man is how he continues to learn from everything he does.
I love the detail you put into every motion of your craft. One thing I have learned, wet your bricks in a bucket before mortaring. You might have done so, I couldn't tell from the video. Really impressed with your knowledge at a young age, you have taught me quite a lot! I have been in the historic restoration trade for many years in New England. I know my trade through the love of the craft. I am fortunate enough to be able to do quality work. I particularly like the charred siding
Love the raw noise of these videos, im an old chick, that tends to work alone on projects like this, (because no one nowadays wants to work this hard or creatively), so im often alone working. What do us-kind talk about at social gatherings? This kind of stuff. Very few get it. We are loners. We are willing to try and fail. We are designers. We use what God has provided. Totally foreign to those that want to flip on a light and watch the tv. I hope to be doing this until the day i go home!!
Very cool. Preserving skills that are being lost is so important. I was halfway expecting you to start making bricks when you started digging & sifting that clay! 😄
7600 views with only seven hundred or so likes. What’s not to love about this much less like. I have also been watching Self Build in Japan. Similar in video technique and letting the work speak for itself. Thank you for sharing your beautiful workmanship. From the high plains of Texas.
I'm looking at the 71 thumbs down that he got, and as I scroll through the comments I noticed that nobody had the backbone to leave a negative comment. Makes me wonder why these people even bother watching videos, so much negativity in the world nowadays!
Mr. Chickadee, I find your videos highly entertaining and inspirational. I wish my HOA wasn't so rabid-- we can't even lay a paving stone in the backyard without approval.
Before I even watch this Mr. Chickadee, you gotta know that we have some sort of ethereal connection goin'. First thing this morning all over my yard were Chickadees. One even hanging on to a towel I set out on the porch to dry. Now all of a sudden your new video appears. Synchronicity, perhaps? Connectivity, for sure.
I love videos like this. I learn so much. And, it was very relaxing to watch. I really liked it without background music or a lot of talking and stuff. Just the soothing sounds of you methodically working works very well for me. I merrily subscribed.
I love it. He knew right where to dig to find that clay! That would be a very nice way to keep a greenhouse warm, too, if you live in an area and need to keep the plants from freezing, too.
Making the fire gases go up, over, down, over again, and then up the chimney will certainly make the most of the heat but I'm sure that smokes the place up until everything gets heated properly. Clever and nicely made.
With masonry heaters when firing up a cold unit it's common to use an access hatch to build a tiny fire inside under the chimney, just a little paper and wood, this gets some draw action going so when you start the fire in the firebox you don't smoke out the cabin. Once these kinds of units warm up they stay warm for hours and hours after the fire is out, as long as you don't let it completely cool down between burns it should be fine to light your next burn in the firebox.
I remember watching these kinds of videos when I was younger, and just being so fascinated. It feels nostalgic to watch this video, even tho it's only one year old
Very slick, that definitely deserves a sub. Lots of lake and hunting camps here in northern Maine that this rig would be perfect for. I’ll build one next spring at mine. Thanks!
At first, I thought you were making the actual bricks yourself because I saw your video that showed you sawing the tree and making the bed with hand tools. I figured you had some secret knowledge and could do it! I have confidence that you could have! :)
Video that show people dont need big money to provide for nice living enviorment. Sure, some improvments can be made, but that is with all things in life (and every man has different way of doing things).
If I ever build myself a cottage, cabin, or a new, bigger homestead farmhouse, I'm putting in a masonry heater, or a couple, depending on the house layout... I can skimp elsewhere and have a kitchen built out of pallets, but I won't skimp on proper heating like the stuff I grew up with. When I immigrated to the United States, I used to think people's firewood piles were a 10 YEAR supply, because I was used to these things that only need 2-3 cords per year to heat up the house, rather than 20+ cords. The cost savings are considerable, if spread out over the lifespan of the heater, but all I ever hear from Americans is "rocket mass, rocket mass, rocket mass..."
As always awesome job, by the way thank you for stating in the comments the clay/mortar mixture this was going to be one of my questions. Take care and God bless you and your family!
Friend you are a great person and I watch all your videos and I find it super entertaining and very elaborate and you learn many things by kissing you as aces things and how you have control of the wood and how you maneuver the incredible and wish you the best in the world and you keep making that kind of content greetings from argentina
I really like this. The time you spent building something useful and sharing is inspiring. I hope to find the bricks soon for this looks like fun, maybe if only for a week. Thanks.
I've got a small lambing barn, I spend a fair bit on electric IR lamps, to keep them warm. I am seriously considering build a masonry heater like yours as I have plenty of seasoned Birch to burn...In spring if I burn it continously the bricks should get nice and warm and the lambs bedding up against it. New Year project.
I have health issues so I don't do a lot durning the day but look at videos. When I first found yours I would watch 10-15 per day plus a few others. Well now I've caught up and must wait till you post another one like everyone else. IT JUST AIN'T FAIR, I don't like to wait. can you hurry up a little. Have a good Thanksgiving Josh and stay safe. Tell Mrs Bird hey. I really do enjoy your videos.
Feed the fire with controlled outside air and not let it steal what the brick is heating! And a pot of water boiling to keep your sinuses from cracking open! LOL
Yea i'd love to see a video that explains the design principles and incorporates advanced design features like outside air intake with a wood gas combustion feature like wood stove fireplace inserts have.
There are at least two combustion chambers which I assume will create a secondary combustion chamber once it's good and hot. As for outside air, it's not so important with this style of stove since it's also using a large amount of mass to retain as much heat as possible, from a very small initial combustion chamber, ie small wood fire, huge fireplace. At least that's how I see it, and I know it's a Russian fireplace, and that's what they do.
For everyone who wants plans, I would recommend this site, free detailed plans for many many stoves of various sizes, some even small enough to go on a strong wooden floor...
eng.stove.ru/products/otopitelno_varochnyie_pechi_ovik/ovik
The stove from this video is a very similar design to one built by FireSpeaking, called the "cabin stove" though I don't think they offer plans anymore...
Thank you for this. Without speaking Russian, it has been a bit difficult to find which of the ovik models are the ones small enough for a wooden floor.
@@tedwalther3140 Ovik 24 for sure, see here, ruclips.net/video/O0Hmu68kr6M/видео.html
Thanks.
I recently watched a video of guy in rural Russia, showing one of this giant stove
Amazing.
There's a lot of plans there. I can't figure out which one you used.
which site?
The garage at our farm was broken into two nights ago and all the tools that belonged to my grandfather were stolen. For some reason watching you work in this video gives me peace. You make me think of what he might have been when he was a young man. Thank you.
So sorry about your loss. Try not to get it down, there are a lot more good people out there than a few of these morons. All the best
For anyone wondering about the design. (It is not clear to most people who don't have experience in building these.) The flames and gasses rise up in the firebox and hit the cooktop "ceiling." They are then pulled to "our right" over the small brick wall laping across more of the iron cooktop. (This can be seen when he lifts up part of the cooktop.) The gasses move down the thin channel on the right of the firebox and actually pass under the firebox. So, in summary, the flame/ gasses go up, (hit cooktop,) then "right," under the cooktop, then straight down, then " turn left to go under the firebox," then up to chimney and out of the house. The most important thing in making this stove is the "damper" inside the main firebox that allows the flame and hot gasses to move directly into the chimney for the first 10 minutes when the "system is cold." Once the chimney is hot, the damper on the left of the firebox can be closed and there will be "enough pull" in the system to pull the gasses up and over the brick wall now "to the right," and then down, and then left under the firebox, and then out. Without this ability to "heat everything up" FIRST, a stove that asks the gasses to "do straight down" will smoke your house out and be unusable.
I love this. No dialogue and especially No Music!
Right?! 👍👍👍👍👍😁👌
I agree 💯 %.
Just the sound of tools and work
Especially no music! Right!
RUclips music is horrid
I just want to say how much i appreciate this channel, I spent 3 yrs in Japan building 2x4 western style homes in the 90's, I have always wanted to go back and see how the Japanese built their traditional homes from start to finish. I was able to view different homes being built the traditional way as a passerby to and from the train station on the way to work, but none to this level of detail and exact precision that the Japanese master carpenters exhibit on a daily basis. Thank you Mr Chickadee for showing us your passion.... hope you keep it going.
as a bricklayer these old methods of mortar /clay slurry/and insulation etc are interesting , Remember guys you have the option of 10% lime mixed with building sand and water to make lime mprtar(instead of cement mortar) if you live in a built up area and dont have access to clay to make slurry and wish to practice your brick bonds and building walls or stove projects like this and repeat until you get it right.. When your work is finished you can crit it and when youre ready to try again just pull it down the next day and brush the bricks dry and wash bricks clean in bucket of water . You can then repeat and practice til youre satisfied with your brickwork project. IMPORTANT don't leave project for longer than 3 weeks or it will set hard and cure as cement and bricks. NB. this doesn't apply to slurry insulation. this is a very clean practical way to practice brickwork in your garden or patio. using the same sand and lime repeatedly. jiust break the project down on completion then use a hard scrubbing brush and separate sand and bricks into two clean piles. enjoy
Wow. Thanks for the great information! Can I use engineering bricks as a fire wall?
awesome advice
Mr. Chickadee never fails to impress. If the year was 1840 and we were settling the land I would pick this guy to be on my team. Amazing to watch a video without rambling or clickbait in 2019.
quiet .. in 1800 we are returning .. 😁😱 thanks to all the bastards in the government .. who squander on weapons and give a damn about middle and lower class citizens.
Oh yeah he is the best. I would still take this style of building today over the shit they permit at the county office
Wish there were more RUclips’s like Mr. Chickadee’s. I echo all the other kudos for a vid well done.
It might take that thing a bit to get warmed up on a cold morning but once it does, I'll bet that sweet baby can throw the heat! My father built a large scale version of this in the basement of our house! I'm sure you were glad for yours last winter! Thanks for the fun video!
Three different mixes in the video,
1. Vermiculite, clay slurry (used as insulation layer under heater
2. Clay slurry, sand (used for mortar between bricks)
3. Clay slurry, sand, wood ashes, wool (used as fireproof layer inside firebox)
Another delightful video, thanks very much!
Great vid. How did you learn all your talants and the fine wood working you do ??????
How will this hold up compared to commercial refractory mortar?
Thank you for sharing your awesome videos, your awesome knowledge, and your recipes!
This feels like a foolish question, but rock-wool, or sheep-wool?
This is what the people from Texas needed in February, 2021. Beautiful build.
The old cast iron cook stove "parts" are beautiful. It is great you found them.
Sir, you made your own concrete out of clay dirt, haven't seen that process since I was a child in the coal fields of West Virginia. Thanks for taking me back.
Alfred L Early jr hey Alfred, just wanted to ask if that was a strong product, and does it last?
Regards
Mortar is what he made.
It looks like he made clay slip and then mixed it with perlite, to make an insulating base so the heat of the stove didn't burn out his floor.
God Bless you Mr Early.
Fellow West Virginia here too Mr. Early, my grandfather was a coalminer, what part did you come from ? My people were from down near Herndon .
Great video
my son was in the peace corp in Paraguay and on a three week visit my wife and I got to help him help rural folks make fagones(cook stoves) We used clay. sand and cow manure as mortar. The cow manure made the motar really sticky and helped prevent cracking. We used unfired clay bricks and constructed it a lot like yours. We made the chimney bigger and taller so we could put in an oven box. He revisited his site 6 years later and the stoves he helped build still worked fine, Did you ever look at my you tube on building my log cabin?
log cabin building-tour Your work is much more refined Love your work Dave
Why do you not have 1 mil subs. I can watch your videos for hours and not realize it. Perfect content . . . Clearly letting his work speak for itself.
Hey mr chickadee If I’m not mistaken I subscribed 4 years ago, I’m 14 now, and that’s when I learned carpentry. I started making a guitar pic with just an old knife and sand paper. Now, I specialise myself in carving. I really thank you for these videos that you’ve posted. These were one of the sources of my inspiration. God bless!!
Salvador Elmer Cabotage III.
Way to go, young man!
As we've just seen from Mr Chickadee, making things is something people were "made to do!". And some people are 'master Craftsman'; the stuff they make serves their House well for years.
Sounds like you're growing into that mastery, too.
Keep having fun with it!
Rick Bonner, Pennsyltucky
Aweee.
@Salvador Elmer Cabotage III: Son, I'm so proud of you for wanting to give back to the person who gave to you. That's an extremely rare and valuable trait to have. You're extremely special! Don't ever change. You will contribute tremendously to the world.
Salvador Elmer Cabotage III Young Man, you have taken a large step into a great big world in what you wrote. Learning by doing is quickly becoming a lost art, but you have decided to do just that and most importantly you thanked the person that inspired you. I know by experience that you will be successful in every thing you do. The measure of a Man is how he continues to learn from everything he does.
Same here. I was 14 when i subscibed here
I love the detail you put into every motion of your craft.
One thing I have learned, wet your bricks in a bucket before mortaring.
You might have done so, I couldn't tell from the video.
Really impressed with your knowledge at a young age, you have taught me quite a lot! I have been in the historic restoration trade for many years in New England. I know my trade through the love of the craft. I am fortunate enough to be able to do quality work.
I particularly like the charred siding
Beautiful. Love the quiet--just the sounds of a man at work and happy about it.
Very interesting and relaxing video. Thank you for not adding music!!
For me, your films are a combination of work and meditation!
Love the raw noise of these videos, im an old chick, that tends to work alone on projects like this, (because no one nowadays wants to work this hard or creatively), so im often alone working.
What do us-kind talk about at social gatherings? This kind of stuff.
Very few get it.
We are loners. We are willing to try and fail. We are designers. We use what God has provided. Totally foreign to those that want to flip on a light and watch the tv.
I hope to be doing this until the day i go home!!
This is how grown men play. A guy building something like this is like a kid with the world's best set of tinker toys.
Nice little heater, resourceful work, thanks for the link.
Firewood, we used to say it warms ya 3 times, cutting, stacking and burning.
Very cool. Preserving skills that are being lost is so important. I was halfway expecting you to start making bricks when you started digging & sifting that clay! 😄
7600 views with only seven hundred or so likes. What’s not to love about this much less like. I have also been watching Self Build in Japan. Similar in video technique and letting the work speak for itself. Thank you for sharing your beautiful workmanship. From the high plains of Texas.
I'm looking at the 71 thumbs down that he got, and as I scroll through the comments I noticed that nobody had the backbone to leave a negative comment. Makes me wonder why these people even bother watching videos, so much negativity in the world nowadays!
Prolly lack of 👍because of full screen view. I was hoping to find mortar contents (and did) or i wouldn't have shrunk the video and 👍either
Straight and to the point! Beautifully done! No music!
Dude! You are such a gift! Thank you for all the time and effort you put into making and then editing your videos!
They’re great!
He's a sweet man.
Mr. Chickadee, I find your videos highly entertaining and inspirational. I wish my HOA wasn't so rabid-- we can't even lay a paving stone in the backyard without approval.
I am speechless, many hours of work years maybe centuries of use. A masonry cool
That clay slurry mortar looks like a far nicer consistency than the sand/cement mortar I'm used to: sticks to bricks beautifully
Before I even watch this Mr. Chickadee, you gotta know that we have some sort of ethereal connection goin'. First thing this morning all over my yard were Chickadees. One even hanging on to a towel I set out on the porch to dry. Now all of a sudden your new video appears. Synchronicity, perhaps? Connectivity, for sure.
Nice work. I really appreciate these old designs. I hope the masonry heater works to your satisfaction. Looks like a proven design. Best wishes, Erik.
Very enjoyable to watch! It's fun watching someone build something like this!
I too am a fan of the jungle boots. Your way of life is very inspiring, thank you.
I love videos like this. I learn so much. And, it was very relaxing to watch. I really liked it without background music or a lot of talking and stuff. Just the soothing sounds of you methodically working works very well for me. I merrily subscribed.
love it. Takes me way way way back. If I could only tell the stories.
I love it. He knew right where to dig to find that clay! That would be a very nice way to keep a greenhouse warm, too, if you live in an area and need to keep the plants from freezing, too.
What ! Type of Plants ! Are you Referring Too !?
He didn’t want to show you the video of him digging holes all over his lawn looking for clay!
@@jackvillan5151 why would he need to dig al over, he already knows the area
This was so comforting to watch, and the wood crackling at the end~
Thank you for blessing all of us with the honor to watch you work.
Thanks for sharing the brilliant Site for stove plans .
Making the fire gases go up, over, down, over again, and then up the chimney will certainly make the most of the heat but I'm sure that smokes the place up until everything gets heated properly. Clever and nicely made.
nah, just put a small fan in a window facing in. Instant autodraft.
With masonry heaters when firing up a cold unit it's common to use an access hatch to build a tiny fire inside under the chimney, just a little paper and wood, this gets some draw action going so when you start the fire in the firebox you don't smoke out the cabin. Once these kinds of units warm up they stay warm for hours and hours after the fire is out, as long as you don't let it completely cool down between burns it should be fine to light your next burn in the firebox.
Nice work.and all the costruction work,lost art in woodworking by hand no power tools.. love it.
I remember watching these kinds of videos when I was younger, and just being so fascinated. It feels nostalgic to watch this video, even tho it's only one year old
This reminds me to go to the feed store and buy some large rubber containers and a sifter for preps...
This dude never ceases to amaze me.
Thank you so much! For everything you do! You give us invaluable tools for life!
Very slick, that definitely deserves a sub. Lots of lake and hunting camps here in northern Maine that this rig would be perfect for. I’ll build one next spring at mine. Thanks!
Very innovative., resourceful. You have in direct heat and direct. Great video.
Excellent craftsmanship
Очень интересное видео. Спасибо вам за проделанную работу по созданию этого видео. 🔝🔝🔝🔝👍👍👍👍
Another wonderful video. I'm on nightshift in the North West Highlands of Scotland (01:43) and this is a treat. Thank you.
Alasdair MacKenzie greetings and hello from Connecticut USA.
Seconded by a Virginia Highlander.
Kin of the Macnabs here in Southern California
Mountains of east Tennessee
Amazing, and you did it all without waking the kids! Thank you - very oddly satisfying.
W.C. Fields would love this guy.
That's a nice little heater.
So inspiring. Thank you, again, Mr. Chickadee!
I really wanted to say something sarcastic about this video. It seems this guys pretty legit
Great stove for heating and cooking. What a surprise at the end. Thank you for posting.
You mud that brick like a pro...good job of masonry.
The silence was deafening. Liked it.
That's awesome thx for the video I was just thinking of buying a wood stove but this is way more awesome thx man
No problem 👍
👏👏👏 Nice heater!!!
At first, I thought you were making the actual bricks yourself because I saw your video that showed you sawing the tree and making the bed with hand tools. I figured you had some secret knowledge and could do it! I have confidence that you could have! :)
vary nice this video changed my plans for my shop thanks
Liked the stove/heater very much. It was different from other people's I've seen.
There's no warmth like wood heat period awesome 👍.
Any time I see you've posted a new video I can't concentrate on anything else until I watch it :-D
Beautiful workmanship as usual. Australia
Thank you for posting your video. From buffalo NY
Just in time for winter. It looks good, now you have a use for all your scrap wood.
Really like this and looking forward to building one in the future in another Small Cabin Living Project. Thanks for sharing..
Video that show people dont need big money to provide for nice living enviorment. Sure, some improvments can be made, but that is with all things in life (and every man has different way of doing things).
Muy bueno !!!! Saludos desde Uruguay !!! 👍🇺🇾
It's really nice to see you at it again,l missed your short films
Good job. Thanks from Madrid, Spain
You make some pretty cool things
There's rocket-mass heater; then there's mass heater; this is the latter! Still heats up, and stays warm a long time!!Good show!
If I ever build myself a cottage, cabin, or a new, bigger homestead farmhouse, I'm putting in a masonry heater, or a couple, depending on the house layout... I can skimp elsewhere and have a kitchen built out of pallets, but I won't skimp on proper heating like the stuff I grew up with. When I immigrated to the United States, I used to think people's firewood piles were a 10 YEAR supply, because I was used to these things that only need 2-3 cords per year to heat up the house, rather than 20+ cords. The cost savings are considerable, if spread out over the lifespan of the heater, but all I ever hear from Americans is "rocket mass, rocket mass, rocket mass..."
Dudes putting off a murderess vibe... I like it.
Sounded like a blast furnace.....nice build
wow.... as always loves your clips where no music but the natural sounds...
Удивительно!какая высокая теплоотдача и экономия!Голыми руками и такой результат!Красавчик!
Looks really cosy and warm.
The whole recipe is splendid 😋✨😍
this is amazing. pleasure to watch
As always awesome job, by the way thank you for stating in the comments the clay/mortar mixture this was going to be one of my questions. Take care and God bless you and your family!
Mr. Chickadee there, would make a good son-in-law.
this is really good, i learned things here
I Am always learning new things.
Friend you are a great person and I watch all your videos and I find it super entertaining and very elaborate and you learn many things by kissing you as aces things and how you have control of the wood and how you maneuver the incredible and wish you the best in the world and you keep making that kind of content greetings from argentina
I really like this. The time you spent building something useful and sharing is inspiring. I hope to find the bricks soon for this looks like fun, maybe if only for a week. Thanks.
How sweet that you took the time to show how❤️❤️❤️🙏
Incredible.
Looks cosy. Thanks for sharing.
Hai costruito una Stube. Bravo !
Another great video
Intriguing. Good job.
I've got a small lambing barn, I spend a fair bit on electric IR lamps, to keep them warm. I am seriously considering build a masonry heater like yours as I have plenty of seasoned Birch to burn...In spring if I burn it continously the bricks should get nice and warm and the lambs bedding up against it. New Year project.
I have health issues so I don't do a lot durning the day but look at videos. When I first found yours I would watch 10-15 per day plus
a few others. Well now I've caught up and must wait till you post another one like everyone else. IT JUST AIN'T FAIR, I don't like to
wait. can you hurry up a little. Have a good Thanksgiving Josh and stay safe. Tell Mrs Bird hey. I really do enjoy your videos.
Oooohh... Very Nice. I am certain...that I need one of those. ❤😎👍
Very beautiful... and so instructive!
Thanks.
Feed the fire with controlled outside air and not let it steal what the brick is heating! And a pot of water boiling to keep your sinuses from cracking open! LOL
Yea i'd love to see a video that explains the design principles and incorporates advanced design features like outside air intake with a wood gas combustion feature like wood stove fireplace inserts have.
There are at least two combustion chambers which I assume will create a secondary combustion chamber once it's good and hot. As for outside air, it's not so important with this style of stove since it's also using a large amount of mass to retain as much heat as possible, from a very small initial combustion chamber, ie small wood fire, huge fireplace.
At least that's how I see it, and I know it's a Russian fireplace, and that's what they do.
Good amish craftsmanship
subscribed because of this video, he made me feel warm all over