Back in the burn chamber cut out a four inch square in the grate so big chunks of hot embers can fall down into a pile under the fire. Then as you feed longer, bigger wood forward the hot embers underneath will catch the big wood on fire easier. Good design. Worthy of a poured concrete foundation that will last.
No suggestions, just a thank you for addressing the ash situation! Of all the videos I've watched, and good lord thee's been a LOT, you're the first I've seen address the ash. I'm glad I stumbled on your videos prior to my build.
Good video. One suggestion, to blow air, here in Bolivia, we used a pvc or metal tube to blow, it is more comfortable without feeling rocket stove heat.
That stove works great ,I made one of the 5 gallon tub versions with perlite and vermiculite , I sit out at night with a brew feeding the fire. I might make one of these too. Thanks from the UK.
Best stove yet , by far . Was thinking what all I could use one of these for besides eggs and simple things , and I realized that the chinese takeout places kind of cook from the same concept except of course they're using gas or propane , but the high heat is about the same . Would need a giant sized wok and chinese sauces and ingredients but I'm willing to take a stab at this , might have to weld a long handle onto the front of the wok to be able to move it around like they do . Yep I'm gonna attempt this , again keep the rocket stove ideas comming
Green show rocket burner awesome just saw it Sept 2020. Great for heat cooking soup like menudo for out door flavors. It's Mexican soup with hominy corn and beef meat and seasonings. Tamales too! GREAT!! To know easy for construction and GREAT Price! Thank you for being Green save energy in cooking.
First, let me say I really like the way you produce your videos and the honesty with which you present your information. I almost always watch the entire video when you post one, so keep up the good work. However, the CSA of the burn chamber is too large for the riser. The total volume of the riser should be 3 times the area of the burn chamber, which includes the air space under where you are burning the fuel. To get the best efficiency, add a couple more courses of firebrick to the top, alternating them to avoid the running seams in the brick. A closed door and handle on the outside of the ash tray would be notable improvements.
Jason, thanks for the feedback and info on CSA. Good stuff. I’ll do some measurements and give the fire brick rocket stove an upgrade with some more bricks. Thanks for watching. I appreciate the encouragement.
I created a TH-cam list for rocket stove videos, and saved vids that looked good. Did not try any of them yet. Then I found yours and just deleted the others. Soon will build. Many thanks.
Ha! That is high praise. I do think that watching a good mix of videos will lead you to the best build for you. Lots of good content out there. Thanks for watching.
This is very nice. It looks like one side of Uncle Harry's outdoor "grill" arrangement from the 60's & 70s. He built his own too. This or similar was in the center and on either side he had the traditional style brick patio grill with the big brick heat reflector behind. He did it so Aunt Lucy could boil corn or scallops or reduce a BBQ sauce. Without his giving up grill space. I remember it because he had a hole in back about the size of a 50¢ piece that he used to tease me was for his giant garden worms to hide in & that the snakes would chase them in there. Lol. He was very inventive & fun. Lol
Excellent. Only thing I would do is use your grinder to cut out the ring shape in the top bricks so the grate sits down, resting on the "legs" and will not slide off....
Great video! I am guessing that the thin galvanized emt tube might fail in the repetitive high heat. It also seems like the air enters too high in your chimney, but you have an great flame that burns high! I have seen guys use copper pipe to provide secondary air horizontally into the side of the burn chamber to feed the vortex, which creates a very hot burn with less ash. Thanks for sharing this! Your channel is interesting and inspirational.
Small bread pan will work well as an ash catcher. Should be a good fit too. Also, if you used a wooden or leather mallet, you can tap the bricks in place with less risk of damage.
Sue, this build is ok for only intermittent outdoor usage for cookouts, etc. But true rocket heaters should use insulated firebrick(more expensive) which allows combustion chamber to be more efficient. It reaches hotter temps and also heats more quickly because they have less mass than heavy non-insulative type firebrick. In rocket mass heaters the heavy mass is a shell outside the insulated core.
Simplest stove I have done is stacking 3 building blocks on top of each other with holes matching vertically and two bricks under each end on the ground for ventilation. Worked great and can be used for two cooking areas or close off one for one! About 8 dollars.
I've been dreaming of a huge 30 inch wok for outdoor cooking, and don't want to use propane. I've been looking around for a good wood option and this is really fantastic. I'm thinking the firebrick on mine would be covered in a traditional brick second layer for looks and for support of larger cooking gear, but I'm so glad this is a simple and efficient rocket stove. I've watched your others, this is the one I think will work for me best.
Thanks Scott. Glad you’ve settled on a solution. You might consider using three rebar risers to hold the wok. My concrete and perlite stove used rebar and it’s been pretty solid. I’d go taller with the rebar to get the right clearance for the wok. You could make them removable in case you wanted to use a traditional pot. Thanks for watching. Let me know when I can come for gumbo. :-)
Really loving your rocket stove videos. I'm starting up a homestead and will have a few uses for wood burning stoves. Heating a yurt is one of them - any thoughts on adapting one of your designs to heat an interior?
That rocket stove went together in a hurry Tom! Looks like it burns really well too. I'm guessing the fire brick will outlast just about any other type of surround.
I agree. It was a fast build, especially if you took out the ash tray. I do think the fire brick will perform better than the concrete. And it will last longer too. Thanks for the feedback and thanks for watching.
Like the ash tray idea best fire brick rocket stove I have seen yet so far . And I have looked and study a lot. This will be the one I go with . Thank you . Great job.
I like your design. I just put something similar together quickly after watching your video. I used fire bricks to build the burn chamber but used a four inch steel pipe for the chimney / secondary burn chamber. I put a six inch section of chimney pipe around that and packed the inbetween with dirt. My purpose is to heat a greenhouse rather than to cook so I need lots of thermal mass and really need the secondary burn chamber to get as hot as it can get, thus the steel pipe. I did extend the primary burn chamber out a little further so that it isn't almost directly under the chimney section and its all working great for my first test. Tomorrow, I will put a dome over it and run some chimney pipe from that and build that ashtray. Although, I'm making more of an oven than a stove, I settled on your design for the fire box as something I could get done quick and easy this year in December and thoroughly test through a season before building a massive masonry heat battery. Right now it will be heating the air and some 55 gallon barrels of water. Next year it will be sand inside masonry structures as heat batteries that I will use to put plants on. The stand allows much higher temps for the battery effect. I hope to be able to put seedlings on the masonry structure to get them started just that much sooner. I need to really scale it up because I'm moving from hydroponics to aquaponics this summer and need to keep the fish warm too. Thanks for the research and design videos, they are really helpful.
I was thinking this might be the way to make a pizza oven -- build one of these easy peasy fire brick rocket stove, abscond/rescue an old Weber kettle BBQ from craigslist, remove legs and cut hole in the bottom to set on top of rocket stove, cut opening on kettle lid for pizza entry way, and add a pizza stone to set it on!
I just threw one together out of recycled chimney bricks and a couple tubes of fireblock mortar, an old grill and a bit of flashing to bend into an ash box. I used birthday candles to start the maple twigs I pruned off my neighbour's tree. Easy, fast and just roasted my first marshmallow while I was curing it!
eternalfizzer good idea. I’ll do a video about different ways to light a rocket stove quickly. The short answer is a very small twigs and a fire starter.
Very neat stove! The best non-mobile one I have seen yet!! However, your abuse of cast iron is not good, I say in jest and sincerity. Never boil water in it. You can see all your seasoning coming off.
Thanks for the tip, David. I hadn't considered that the boiling water would take off the seasoning. I'll have to pick up a second hand pot for my boiling. Thanks for watching.
Mikael Soenjoto Thank you, Mikael. It is my favorite too. When you make this, leave out the secondary air tube. It doesn’t help enough to justify the extra work. Thanks for watching.
I think you got it right this time............should work well.......and those Fire Bricks are not really that expensive when you consider all the problems they solve....Cheers
I have fire brick that I bought at Menards, but it's about half as thick as yours, I couldn't build anything with them if I wanted to, but maybe I could line a square type concrete rocket stove, using a plastic kitty litter bucket as the form, the concrete would have to cure for a month before firing it up. You gave me an idea to try that, since you put your hand on the fire brick and it apparently wasn't hot enough to destroy the concrete, if I decide to go that way. I just want something to make charcoal with, for filtering water. Thanks for the video, it'll help out, I just wish I could find thicker fire brick.
I know the thinner brick that you are referring to. I’ve used it to line the firebox of a cob-bodied rocket stove. I have been able to use stove adhesive to glue some together into a small rocket stove inside my grill. That worked pretty well. I thicker, full-size firebrick does stack up better, though. Thank you for watching.
Thank you. What a beautiful, simple, well presented, working well stove. well done!!! What do you think of using cob and slip instead of paste and mortar? Thank you
This is the best rocket stove build that I've seen. Well thought out and safe with your use of firebrick and fire cement. Using concrete pavers in some other videos is asking for trouble. Thanks...great job.
To cook the perfect eggs -put eggs in pan bring to boil. Take eggs off burner once boiling (cover pan for 10 to 14 minutes. )Cool eggs to stop cooking in pan of cold water. Let eggs sit in cold water for about 5 minutes then peel one by one from the pan. A little white vinegar in the water will help release the shell from the eggs when boiling them.👍
You’re a hoot. Yes I only use a few words some times but I am a woman so often there are a lot more. FYI: I have enjoyed several of your videos and your presentation. I love this green technology.. I watch Time Team and eat up how earlier people used the earths bounty and did very well. I do have a thing for the use of less for fewer. You would be amazed at how common that usage is and how I wish I could get people to understand that fewer is used for numbers and less is for amount. 😊💁
Ah. Did I say "less bricks" in that video? My mom likes to correct my grammar too. :-) lol. I will remember to say "fewer" in the future. I'm still teachable. Thank you for the feedback.
the very best project i've seen on ur videos. green.love that much.i probably make one too !! haha.. just trying.i'm new here. i like to explore also...
I was just wondering if the secondary combustion tube's end was placed a little too high, as well you might try perforating the top 2 inches of it. Please correct me if i am wrong. GREAT VID'S! Keep up the grand work.
Ryan Kinzel I am a novice with regard to secondary combustion. The tube didn’t have much draw, so I’m not sure how effective it is. I do want to learn more about using secondary air correctly. Thanks for the feedback and the suggestion.
@@GreenShortzDIY Thank you for your time and quick reply, You do great work. I have built a few rocket stove's and the secondary combustion is essential for a "Stoichiometric burn" in my opinion. You must make use of the gases that are released from the wood's after primary combustion.
@@GreenShortzDIY Thank you again, It's nice to be ale to speak with the builders of such items. You do amazing work with much insight into things i am unaware off. I'm just a welder from Alberta, Canada. KEEP UP THE INSPIRATIONAL VIDS! Peace and love from cold cold Canada.
Your videos are unique-- I have never seen a series correcting flaws, esp. based on viewers' comments. Your concept should be adapted by others in various fields. Thank you.
Thank you, Paul. I learn a lot from the comments. I’m more intuitive in my approach, which sometimes leads to mistakes. That’s part of the learning process for me and makes for interesting videos. :-) Thank you for watching.
I like your design. It's fairly compact and practical. Sealing the bricks like you did makes it more efficient. I agree completely with you on the 'Greenness' of your stove. Unfortunately the 'Greenies' don't. Your local council would probably ban it and fine you. They are all about control of the citizens NOT real solutions. Keep up the good work. I'll be watching all of your shows.
Thanks for watching Boss. Hope they don't come after me, I've got too many rocket stoves to carry and run at the same time. :-) I appreciate the feedback.
Please tell me a little more why the air tube? Was it really a benefit? What more do you feel you got by using , more costly, firebrick vs. plain old bricks? Have you thought about if you’d left the grate longer it could have supported another brick to be used as a damper? Out of the different stoves you’ve built, which are your top two favorites (in order)? Thanks for your response
r. michael wilensky the tube really doesn’t add much benefit. It was sort of an experiment. I thought it would draft more. The concept works better when there is more combustion time for the air, like in a rocket mass heater. I’ve seen designs that incorporate a supplemental air tube. I haven’t done a plain brick rocket stove yet to know the difference I do have some old bricks that I use for the base of some stoves. They’ve done fine. You could always give them a try first. If they fail, you’re only out a couple bucks. This firebrick rocket stove is my favorite, but I like the cobb and concrete ones in a close second. For me, it’s less about the stove and more about the rocket burn process. The efficiency makes me happy. Thanks for the feedback and for watching.
Just wondering if the front bricks are laid out flat would increase the draft due to reduced cross section of the chimney? If the question makes sense in the first place, still newbie in this area. Thanks!
How can we lower the heat then, to bring the eggs to a simmer? Quite a few things start out higher heat and then need to be lowered.... I have really learned a lot from you! I think in an emergency I could even build one out of rocks and mortar. However, we may not have mortar. I really like the one out of bricks! Much less work!
imaslowlerner I’m guessing it would be easier to just build two stoves. But, you could certainly tweak a design to make it two burner. That would look cool. Now you’ve got me thinking. :-) Thanks for the feedback.
I use to build masonry fireplaces and that's the way you suppose to build them with the fire brick only, other bricks will crumble over time also ..you lay them vertical the way you did it they are made to be laid that way the fire brick will last forever.
I’ve got a little USB fan, but it requires extra energy. I was primarily blowing to see how big I could get the flames. I think it draws very well on its own. Thanks for the feedback. Thanks for watching.
Would be neat to use a thermal energy generator to run a fan, and once your fire is heated up, the fan will be more effective. Also a solar powered fan forsure. I think the best idea what to have multiple airports in the burn chamber
I live in an apartment. It is against the lease to build a fire on the balcony. The flame could be carried to the structure of the building by a number of causes. Yes. Please be careful. The video shows that flames from the stove can get high.
I made the traditional cinder block stove yesterday. It struggled to breathe. No wind at all. I like your elevated grate solution! I'll try that and possible add a breather hole in the back of the fire box on the other side. QUESTION: Do you think if you left the back lower brick out you'd be burning better too? Or cut a vent hole?
A good question. I’ve always heard that “continuous cross section” is important for optimal airflow through the stove. I usually like having airflow come from one direction, but I haven’t experimented with other options. Give your idea a try. Don’t glue anything together until you’re happy with the airflow.
The term rocket stove is used a bit loosely here on TH-cam. So, I can’t argue with your assessment. It does make the rocket sound and pulls a convection current, so at least some criterion are met. Those are the most important two in my opinion. But, yes, not a true rocket stove.
You’re welcome, James. It’s called a rocket stove because of the sound it makes. You may have heard the rocket roar when the stove was burning fast. Thank you for watching.
GreenShortz DIY oh that’s why. That makes sense and the fire looks like the fire that shoots out of the Space Shuttle and other rockets when they take off. Now that you mention it the sound is just like a rocket 🚀.
Back in the burn chamber cut out a four inch square in the grate so big chunks of hot embers can fall down into a pile under the fire. Then as you feed longer, bigger wood forward the hot embers underneath will catch the big wood on fire easier.
Good design. Worthy of a poured concrete foundation that will last.
No suggestions, just a thank you for addressing the ash situation! Of all the videos I've watched, and good lord thee's been a LOT, you're the first I've seen address the ash. I'm glad I stumbled on your videos prior to my build.
This is the best rocket stove design I've seen! I'm going to attempt to build this. Thanks for your good work.
Thank you for watching. Good luck with your build.
Good video. One suggestion, to blow air, here in Bolivia, we used a pvc or metal tube to blow, it is more comfortable without feeling rocket stove heat.
You’re a genius, no one else had used firebrick to make the stove. Everyone complained that cinder blocks crack.
This one I can build without a lot of tools, thank you so much!
That stove works great ,I made one of the 5 gallon tub versions with perlite and vermiculite , I sit out at night with a brew feeding the fire. I might make one of these too. Thanks from the UK.
Best stove yet , by far . Was thinking what all I could use one of these for besides eggs and simple things , and I realized that the chinese takeout places kind of cook from the same concept except of course they're using gas or propane , but the high heat is about the same . Would need a giant sized wok and chinese sauces and ingredients but I'm willing to take a stab at this , might have to weld a long handle onto the front of the wok to be able to move it around like they do . Yep I'm gonna attempt this , again keep the rocket stove ideas comming
Green show rocket burner awesome just saw it Sept 2020. Great for heat cooking soup like menudo for out door flavors. It's Mexican soup with hominy corn and beef meat and seasonings. Tamales too! GREAT!! To know easy for construction and GREAT Price! Thank you for being Green save energy in cooking.
First, let me say I really like the way you produce your videos and the honesty with which you present your information. I almost always watch the entire video when you post one, so keep up the good work. However, the CSA of the burn chamber is too large for the riser. The total volume of the riser should be 3 times the area of the burn chamber, which includes the air space under where you are burning the fuel. To get the best efficiency, add a couple more courses of firebrick to the top, alternating them to avoid the running seams in the brick. A closed door and handle on the outside of the ash tray would be notable improvements.
Jason, thanks for the feedback and info on CSA. Good stuff. I’ll do some measurements and give the fire brick rocket stove an upgrade with some more bricks. Thanks for watching. I appreciate the encouragement.
What does CSA stand for? Cross section area?
Joseph...I think that is correct. In concept, at least, if not word for word. Thanks for watching.
Thank you for your rapid, honest, response. I truly enjoy viewing your informative videos. Thanks
Thank you Michael. I love the interactive part of TH-cam. Minus the trolls, of course. :-) Thanks for watching.
This is definitely the best Rocket Stove yet! Thank you for all the experiments you do! 👍
Thanks for the feedback, Mae. And thanks for watching.
I created a TH-cam list for rocket stove videos, and saved vids that looked good. Did not try any of them yet. Then I found yours and just deleted the others. Soon will build. Many thanks.
Ha! That is high praise. I do think that watching a good mix of videos will lead you to the best build for you. Lots of good content out there. Thanks for watching.
Same here! Fire brick is the safest way to go.
🎉@@GreenShortzDIY
🎉@@GreenShortzDIY
This is fantastic, really educational and well produced - keep em coming!
Thanks for watching and for the encouragement.
I'm a 72 year old woman . I'm so excited about building a rocketstove . I'll let you know how it turns out .
This is very nice. It looks like one side of Uncle Harry's outdoor "grill" arrangement from the 60's & 70s. He built his own too. This or similar was in the center and on either side he had the traditional style brick patio grill with the big brick heat reflector behind. He did it so Aunt Lucy could boil corn or scallops or reduce a BBQ sauce. Without his giving up grill space. I remember it because he had a hole in back about the size of a 50¢ piece that he used to tease me was for his giant garden worms to hide in & that the snakes would chase them in there. Lol. He was very inventive & fun. Lol
I'm honored to remind you of Uncle Harry. :-) He sounds like a cool guy. Thanks for watching.
GreenShortz DIY he really was. The best.
Excellent. Only thing I would do is use your grinder to cut out the ring shape in the top bricks so the grate sits down, resting on the "legs" and will not slide off....
Great video! I am guessing that the thin galvanized emt tube might fail in the repetitive high heat. It also seems like the air enters too high in your chimney, but you have an great flame that burns high! I have seen guys use copper pipe to provide secondary air horizontally into the side of the burn chamber to feed the vortex, which creates a very hot burn with less ash. Thanks for sharing this! Your channel is interesting and inspirational.
Simple design and great craftsmanship.
Your explanations and video is excellent
Glad you liked it! Thank you for watching.
The best masonry rocket stove I've seen online so far 😎
Thanks for the encouragement, Eugene. Thanks for watching.
Definitely my fave rocket stove of all your models. 👍🏼
Yay! Me too Joy. Thanks for watching. :-)
Good and best idea for simple and emergency kitchen use. Well done good job
That is an amazing array of stoves. Thanks for all the work involved . We benefit greatly.
Small bread pan will work well as an ash catcher. Should be a good fit too.
Also, if you used a wooden or leather mallet, you can tap the bricks in place with less risk of damage.
Update: I bought some caulk tube type mortar so I can at least seal the bricks I have.
Just too many air leaks causing too much wood to use.
Sue, this build is ok for only intermittent outdoor usage for cookouts, etc. But true rocket heaters should use insulated firebrick(more expensive) which allows combustion chamber to be more efficient. It reaches hotter temps and also heats more quickly because they have less mass than heavy non-insulative type firebrick. In rocket mass heaters the heavy mass is a shell outside the insulated core.
Lots of good ideas on that rocket stove. I like the fire brick, and the ashtray. Keep it Green. :)
Simplest stove I have done is stacking 3 building blocks on top of each other with holes matching vertically and two bricks under each end on the ground for ventilation. Worked great and can be used for two cooking areas or close off one for one! About 8 dollars.
I've been dreaming of a huge 30 inch wok for outdoor cooking, and don't want to use propane. I've been looking around for a good wood option and this is really fantastic. I'm thinking the firebrick on mine would be covered in a traditional brick second layer for looks and for support of larger cooking gear, but I'm so glad this is a simple and efficient rocket stove. I've watched your others, this is the one I think will work for me best.
Thanks Scott. Glad you’ve settled on a solution. You might consider using three rebar risers to hold the wok. My concrete and perlite stove used rebar and it’s been pretty solid. I’d go taller with the rebar to get the right clearance for the wok. You could make them removable in case you wanted to use a traditional pot. Thanks for watching. Let me know when I can come for gumbo. :-)
What about using some charcoal in with the wood for longer lasting burns with the wood.thats a good sized wok.
@@GreenShortzDIY well said....gumbo...lol
Really loving your rocket stove videos. I'm starting up a homestead and will have a few uses for wood burning stoves. Heating a yurt is one of them - any thoughts on adapting one of your designs to heat an interior?
That rocket stove went together in a hurry Tom! Looks like it burns really well too. I'm guessing the fire brick will outlast just about any other type of surround.
I agree. It was a fast build, especially if you took out the ash tray. I do think the fire brick will perform better than the concrete. And it will last longer too. Thanks for the feedback and thanks for watching.
This is a great item to make for those people with all the tools featured in this tutorial.
Like the ash tray idea best fire brick rocket stove I have seen yet so far . And I have looked and study a lot. This will be the one I go with . Thank you . Great job.
I like your design. I just put something similar together quickly after watching your video. I used fire bricks to build the burn chamber but used a four inch steel pipe for the chimney / secondary burn chamber. I put a six inch section of chimney pipe around that and packed the inbetween with dirt. My purpose is to heat a greenhouse rather than to cook so I need lots of thermal mass and really need the secondary burn chamber to get as hot as it can get, thus the steel pipe.
I did extend the primary burn chamber out a little further so that it isn't almost directly under the chimney section and its all working great for my first test. Tomorrow, I will put a dome over it and run some chimney pipe from that and build that ashtray.
Although, I'm making more of an oven than a stove, I settled on your design for the fire box as something I could get done quick and easy this year in December and thoroughly test through a season before building a massive masonry heat battery. Right now it will be heating the air and some 55 gallon barrels of water. Next year it will be sand inside masonry structures as heat batteries that I will use to put plants on. The stand allows much higher temps for the battery effect. I hope to be able to put seedlings on the masonry structure to get them started just that much sooner.
I need to really scale it up because I'm moving from hydroponics to aquaponics this summer and need to keep the fish warm too.
Thanks for the research and design videos, they are really helpful.
Today I found my new favorite channel !!! Gonna binge your vids!!! Keep up the great work
Thank you for the honor, Rick. I appreciate it. :-)
This a beautiful rocket stove. I have just purchased my fire bricks from a brick yard and will make your version.
Thank you. Good luck with your build. Thank you for watching.
@@GreenShortzDIY I put it together unmortared but will get the mortar and permanently secure the fire bricks together.
@@MaLiArtworks186 thank you for the update!
Algorithm led me here. You just acquired another subscriber.
Thank you for watching. Thanks for the sub!
MY GOD,THIS IS REALLY CREATIVITY,GOD BLESS YOU SO MUCH
Thank you best one I have seen and I watched a lot of them great job
Thanks so much Tina! I think this is my favorite rocket stove so far too. Thanks for watching.
I was thinking this might be the way to make a pizza oven -- build one of these easy peasy fire brick rocket stove, abscond/rescue an old Weber kettle BBQ from craigslist, remove legs and cut hole in the bottom to set on top of rocket stove, cut opening on kettle lid for pizza entry way, and add a pizza stone to set it on!
R A I’ve got an old Weber I’ve been saving for a project. I like your idea. Thanks for the suggestion.
Gr
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Great🙂
You did a great job on this stove, and a good video. Thank you.
Thank you for watching, Jerry.
You're a natural firebug. I love your content 🔥🔥🔥🔥👍
I love fire. Soothing and useful. :-) Thank you for watching.
King of Rocket stoves!
Thank you for the vote of confidence. :-)
I will go get some fire bricks tomorrow, great job! Thanks!
This is definitely a project i wanna make during lockdown periods! Thanks for the video!
I just threw one together out of recycled chimney bricks and a couple tubes of fireblock mortar, an old grill and a bit of flashing to bend into an ash box. I used birthday candles to start the maple twigs I pruned off my neighbour's tree. Easy, fast and just roasted my first marshmallow while I was curing it!
Awesome! Free bricks are the best way to go. Even your neighbor's tree provided the fuel. Love it!
@@GreenShortzDIY I could use more instructions on how to get mine going without smoking out the neighbourhood though ;-)
eternalfizzer good idea. I’ll do a video about different ways to light a rocket stove quickly. The short answer is a very small twigs and a fire starter.
@@GreenShortzDIY yes please!
The way you butter the brick with the cement is the way Brazilian’s do it ! That’s how they build their houses ! 👍🏼
Very nice and neat. Please show us how to slow the heat for a slow cooking too.
Very neat stove! The best non-mobile one I have seen yet!! However, your abuse of cast iron is not good, I say in jest and sincerity. Never boil water in it. You can see all your seasoning coming off.
Thanks for the tip, David. I hadn't considered that the boiling water would take off the seasoning. I'll have to pick up a second hand pot for my boiling. Thanks for watching.
OMG I've always wondered why all the videos online don't build with the bricks vertically... Makes so much more sense!
Agreed. I think people are just used to seeing bricks laid flat. Thank you for the feedback. Thank you for watching.
I got Mexican pumice bricks and I can't wait to get started.
Ooh! Pumice blocks should work great! Thank you for watching.
Great, you gave me a critical info. about getting the fire bricks, thank you very much!
Glad I could help. Thank you for watching.
This is the best one. Will make this one day. Appreciate. Thank you !
Mikael Soenjoto Thank you, Mikael. It is my favorite too. When you make this, leave out the secondary air tube. It doesn’t help enough to justify the extra work. Thanks for watching.
i like this one better than the other one
I really like this one the best. I'm going to make a cinder block rocket stove because that's what I have on hand.
I think you got it right this time............should work well.......and those Fire Bricks are not really that expensive when you consider all the problems they solve....Cheers
You gave an option to make stove..it's cool. Thanks.
Glad you like it! Thanks for watching.
I have fire brick that I bought at Menards, but it's about half as thick as yours, I couldn't build anything with them if I wanted to, but maybe I could line a square type concrete rocket stove, using a plastic kitty litter bucket as the form, the concrete would have to cure for a month before firing it up. You gave me an idea to try that, since you put your hand on the fire brick and it apparently wasn't hot enough to destroy the concrete, if I decide to go that way. I just want something to make charcoal with, for filtering water. Thanks for the video, it'll help out, I just wish I could find thicker fire brick.
I know the thinner brick that you are referring to. I’ve used it to line the firebox of a cob-bodied rocket stove. I have been able to use stove adhesive to glue some together into a small rocket stove inside my grill. That worked pretty well. I thicker, full-size firebrick does stack up better, though. Thank you for watching.
Love your Rocket Stove!! Thank you! I’ll try ti make one, and will give you a feedback!
Good ideas. If one uses the standard size fire brick the measurement is 4 and 1/2 x 9 x 2 inches so no need for mortar to fill gaps
Thank you. What a beautiful, simple, well presented, working well stove. well done!!! What do you think of using cob and slip instead of paste and mortar? Thank you
This is the best rocket stove build that I've seen. Well thought out and safe with your use of firebrick and fire cement. Using concrete pavers in some other videos is asking for trouble. Thanks...great job.
Thank you, Michael. If I did this again, I’d leave out secondary air tube. It doesn’t add much airflow, if any. Thank you for watching.
So I could build this with just the firebrick? And the grate of course
What kind of trouble could be caused by using pavers?
Am just now learning about this.
To cook the perfect eggs -put eggs in pan bring to boil. Take eggs off burner once boiling (cover pan for 10 to 14 minutes. )Cool eggs to stop cooking in pan of cold water. Let eggs sit in cold water for about 5 minutes then peel one by one from the pan. A little white vinegar in the water will help release the shell from the eggs when boiling them.👍
Very informative. I might try making one. Thanks for the video. Keep making more of them. Bye
Thanks for watching! If you make this stove, you can leave out the pipe element. It wasn't worth the extra effort.
I was researching rocket stoves and stumbled across you. We're close by you. We're about an hour north of ATL. I had thought about fire bricks. GMTA!
Cool! Thanks for reaching out. Where are you located, if you’re saying? I do love this fire brick version of the rocket stove. Thanks for watching.
Habersham Co.@@GreenShortzDIY
Nice you could build a top with angle iron for base and cross pieces for larger cook top more stable thank you
Excellent intelligently presented video. Thanks for not opening with "hi guys". :-) Really enjoyed your video, thanks!
Wonderful! Thank you! 🌹👏🌹👏🌹
Thank you for watching, Sandra. 👍🏻🙌🏼😀
You’re a hoot. Yes I only use a few words some times but I am a woman so often there are a lot more.
FYI: I have enjoyed several of your videos and your presentation. I love this green technology.. I watch Time Team and eat up how earlier people used the earths bounty and did very well.
I do have a thing for the use of less for fewer. You would be amazed at how common that usage is and how I wish I could get people to understand that fewer is used for numbers and less is for amount. 😊💁
Ah. Did I say "less bricks" in that video? My mom likes to correct my grammar too. :-) lol. I will remember to say "fewer" in the future. I'm still teachable. Thank you for the feedback.
Thanks for sharing this with us.
Thank you for watching.
Wish I could drive my car from those sticks hahah
Great video really cool , nice video ...
the very best project i've seen on ur videos. green.love that much.i probably make one too !! haha.. just trying.i'm new here. i like to explore also...
VERY COOL STOVE I LIKE IT I NEED TO MAKE ONE
I was just wondering if the secondary combustion tube's end was placed a little too high, as well you might try perforating the top 2 inches of it. Please correct me if i am wrong. GREAT VID'S! Keep up the grand work.
Ryan Kinzel I am a novice with regard to secondary combustion. The tube didn’t have much draw, so I’m not sure how effective it is. I do want to learn more about using secondary air correctly. Thanks for the feedback and the suggestion.
@@GreenShortzDIY Thank you for your time and quick reply, You do great work. I have built a few rocket stove's and the secondary combustion is essential for a "Stoichiometric burn" in my opinion. You must make use of the gases that are released from the wood's after primary combustion.
Oh wait i almost forgot, Peace and Love from cold cold Canada!
@@GreenShortzDIY Thank you again, It's nice to be ale to speak with the builders of such items. You do amazing work with much insight into things i am unaware off. I'm just a welder from Alberta, Canada. KEEP UP THE INSPIRATIONAL VIDS! Peace and love from cold cold Canada.
I agree with Ryan Kinzel. Secondary air tube should open into where the heart of the fire is.
Your videos are unique-- I have never seen a series correcting flaws, esp. based on viewers' comments. Your concept should be adapted by others in various fields. Thank you.
Thank you, Paul. I learn a lot from the comments. I’m more intuitive in my approach, which sometimes leads to mistakes. That’s part of the learning process for me and makes for interesting videos. :-) Thank you for watching.
I like your design. It's fairly compact and practical. Sealing the bricks like you did makes it more efficient. I agree completely with you on the 'Greenness' of your stove. Unfortunately the 'Greenies' don't. Your local council would probably ban it and fine you. They are all about control of the citizens NOT real solutions. Keep up the good work. I'll be watching all of your shows.
Thanks for watching Boss. Hope they don't come after me, I've got too many rocket stoves to carry and run at the same time. :-) I appreciate the feedback.
wow this is the best one ever. I will delete the others . This is going up outside my car port. Thanks. Can you do a double burner ha ha ha.
Que lindo esooo!!!.... Ya lo haré en mi tierra cuando me marche de España jejeje .....Muchas gracias Un saludo desde Barcelona....bye, bye....
Please tell me a little more why the air tube? Was it really a benefit? What more do you feel you got by using , more costly, firebrick vs. plain old bricks? Have you thought about if you’d left the grate longer it could have supported another brick to be used as a damper? Out of the different stoves you’ve built, which are your top two favorites (in order)? Thanks for your response
r. michael wilensky the tube really doesn’t add much benefit. It was sort of an experiment. I thought it would draft more. The concept works better when there is more combustion time for the air, like in a rocket mass heater. I’ve seen designs that incorporate a supplemental air tube. I haven’t done a plain brick rocket stove yet to know the difference I do have some old bricks that I use for the base of some stoves. They’ve done fine. You could always give them a try first. If they fail, you’re only out a couple bucks. This firebrick rocket stove is my favorite, but I like the cobb and concrete ones in a close second. For me, it’s less about the stove and more about the rocket burn process. The efficiency makes me happy. Thanks for the feedback and for watching.
Thank you for sharing knowledge awesome show time LoL
Thank you, Rafael. Thank you for watching.
Dam son, that was a bad ass rocket stove!!!
A complement of the highest degree. Thanks bro. :-)
Just wondering if the front bricks are laid out flat would increase the draft due to reduced cross section of the chimney? If the question makes sense in the first place, still newbie in this area. Thanks!
Thank you it look Simple and easy.
Thank you for watching.
IS A GREAT IDEA BEUTIFUL WORK , GOD BLESSED YOUR IDEAS , THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR YOURS VIDEOS , BE FINE , SEE YOU LATER BRO
Thank you very much!
Your rocket stove is beautiful! 💕
Fuel, Oxygen & Heat... hot stuff!
How can we lower the heat then, to bring the eggs to a simmer? Quite a few things start out higher heat and then need to be lowered.... I have really learned a lot from you! I think in an emergency I could even build one out of rocks and mortar. However, we may not have mortar. I really like the one out of bricks! Much less work!
BUETIFUL VIDEO MR GREENSHORTZ THANK YOU I SEEE YOU LATER B. G.
I normally use only two burners when I cook on my kitchen stove. I'm wondering if you can make a two burner rocket stove?
imaslowlerner I’m guessing it would be easier to just build two stoves. But, you could certainly tweak a design to make it two burner. That would look cool. Now you’ve got me thinking. :-) Thanks for the feedback.
I love the way you use the fire brick! Can you do one with mass heater? Can you add a J tube to the one you just made? Would you call this a 4 inch?
I use to build masonry fireplaces and that's the way you suppose to build them with the fire brick only, other bricks will crumble over time also ..you lay them vertical the way you did it they are made to be laid that way the fire brick will last forever.
Thank you, Richard. I always appreciate hearing from a pro. Thank you for watching.
@@GreenShortzDIY You're welcome! and a smart choice because them firebrick are the best to use, they also generate more heat in the home fireplace!!
I like it real well
Can I build this inside a large conventional wood stove? Thank you 👏🌹👏
If u could come up with a plan to introduce air flow to the opening instead of blowing. Maybe a solar fan with some kind of induction.
I’ve got a little USB fan, but it requires extra energy. I was primarily blowing to see how big I could get the flames. I think it draws very well on its own. Thanks for the feedback. Thanks for watching.
Would be neat to use a thermal energy generator to run a fan, and once your fire is heated up, the fan will be more effective. Also a solar powered fan forsure. I think the best idea what to have multiple airports in the burn chamber
Try to add coppers pipes to heat water at the same time
I think I could make this for my balcony. Thx 👌🏽👍🏽
Be careful. :-) Thanks for watching.
I live in an apartment. It is against the lease to build a fire on the balcony. The flame could be carried to the structure of the building by a number of causes. Yes. Please be careful. The video shows that flames from the stove can get high.
I made the traditional cinder block stove yesterday. It struggled to breathe. No wind at all. I like your elevated grate solution! I'll try that and possible add a breather hole in the back of the fire box on the other side.
QUESTION: Do you think if you left the back lower brick out you'd be burning better too? Or cut a vent hole?
A good question. I’ve always heard that “continuous cross section” is important for optimal airflow through the stove. I usually like having airflow come from one direction, but I haven’t experimented with other options. Give your idea a try. Don’t glue anything together until you’re happy with the airflow.
That's actually a small fireplace and chimney. I wouldn't call that a rocket stove. But it works and that's what counts
The term rocket stove is used a bit loosely here on TH-cam. So, I can’t argue with your assessment. It does make the rocket sound and pulls a convection current, so at least some criterion are met. Those are the most important two in my opinion. But, yes, not a true rocket stove.
Stay safe and stay healthy!
Thanks for the video. Love it. Great job. Rocket 🚀 Stove. Interesting name for it.
You’re welcome, James. It’s called a rocket stove because of the sound it makes. You may have heard the rocket roar when the stove was burning fast. Thank you for watching.
GreenShortz DIY oh that’s why. That makes sense and the fire looks like the fire that shoots out of the Space Shuttle and other rockets when they take off. Now that you mention it the sound is just like a rocket 🚀.
Keep it going
Hi! Great idea about the ash tray. Would there be enough coals left over to relight your fire next time? Thanks!