A metal dryer vent or water heater vent elbow works great. Cheap and easy. Also put the stick hole towards the wind so it will blow in to feed oxygen to the fire. Adding a 1" stick in the chimney helps the fire feed up to the pan. These tips made my stove work better. Going to change mine from 16 to 20 brick stove. Also saved the burner grate off the top of my old gas cook stove to put on top of it.
Nice video - like your narration. Funny, you and another channel both do these “back to nature” builds and then use a propane torch to start the fire!!
First mod is building a small rocket stove out of cans, supported by a rocket-stove-shaped pile of bricks. Seems like a lot of fiddly work to end up with a smaller stove. Second mod with the hardware cloth looks like a winner.
You nailed it, Eric! Could it be better? Well, maybe, but that second one is officially *Better Than Good Enough*. After that, it's all just goofing off. We're all welcome to goof off, because goofing off is fun, but for simplicity, when you're just going to go speed-fire in the back yard, now you know: A metal grating plus that many bricks, built with that height, and the job gets done. That skill is especially useful when wood is wet, because with a fire that's high-temp, low fuel-consumption, you're able to cook larger fuel, driving off dampness so that you can get a larger campfire going. Again--you nailed it, great job, and as always, I really love your personality. The ethic of showing what doesn't work and then working your way toward what does work--that's the best example for anyone trying to develop a new skill.
Phil here from New Zealand we r a very diy country so we just think that u r totally great love yr videos u seem such a genuine guy to us good on u mate
Did the second one this arvo. Worked very well even my teenagers said so. Boiled a kettle for tea and heated oil for excellent poppadums. Many thanks from west wales. Diolch.
you could make a vortex rocket stove with the cans inside the bricks with the last one that you did with the mesh at the bottom to gain more air from underneath
I made one of the coffee can rocket stoves that are on TH-cam, I wish there was a way for the fuel/wood to be gravity fed when using it. There isn't a ton of room for the sticks of wood and they tend to burn up quickly while I'm cooking. Trying to feed the fire and cook at the same time is a challenge. If the tube for the sticks was at an angle, I could use much longer sticks that would keep falling in as the ends burn.
Great video I just built 3 side by side rocket stove for the use of cooking on my problem is getting a good fire to start. Guess I need to get one of them propane burner things to start mine with. Thanks for showing us your babies cute cute..
I believe the last rocket stove (using only bricks)will be the most efficient. A bit of advice, about five years ago, I built the same style brick rocket stove. Starting from the ground up, make it a maximum of seven layers of bricks, starting with the air intake layer, as the first layer of bricks. this will give brick stove, the maximum amount of efficiency for this style of brick rocket stove,(about as efficient as the household stove top). Keep an additional brick separate, to slide in front of the air intake as needed, to control the height of the flames.
What if you used a piece of stainless steel flue pipe? We have a small wood parlour stove we made a chimney for. I bet we have some extra pieces. Also going to try and use fire bricks.
One aspect of the "Rocket Stove" is ease of building for use during "unique situations," which may be happening soon. This seems Labor intensive... This is a goid thought, but maybe thought out more to make it easier to facilitate when under stressful situations... I like that your thinking... Thinking is good... Leads to the innovation! Keep on thinking, your getting somewhere!!!! Yes, life skills involve cerebral activity!! Right On!
I have been obsessed with these for about 8 years. From what I’ve seen the heat will make quick work of the tin can chimney. The temperatures can be very high.
A thought on the one with the hardware cloth. If you just cut it to the depth of the fire box you could put a few bends in it and make a trough that would allow you to put more wood in the fire box at one time. I have too many projects right now or I would give it a try myself and let you know the results.
Great Video. Fire at the end was pretty high for cooking. Too much air is flowing thru so If you slightly cover the bottom opening of the rocket stove with a piece of tile, but leave a little space for air to cycle in. Now there is less air in, less flames. And the fire should last longer. I am from Texas and am experimenting while I build one also. Also try putting an open can underneath the metal sheet. Just a thought if you are using it for cooking. If its just for heat or just chillin' out...what you made works just fine. Bricks seem better that the blocks. Great Video
Agreed, blocks won't last if you really needed this to feed your family. Bricks last and last! They are a lot more expensive but worth every penny, IMHOpinion!
Instead of screwing the cans together, friction fit them, drill holes and then pop rivet the pieces together to make a continuous stack. Also you need to seal around the joints to get the best air draw. Maybe go with a plaster of paris? I think they are pretty cheap, that's what everyone uses to make tin can forges.
🌱Lv ur true spirit! Ur Mantra ‘use what you have is Golden! If you are truly and seemingly off the grid, then bricks/stone drives it! Any physical tool can make this happen! You can do this with out prefab tools in earth/ground, and leave no trace! Be true to: Align with earth, and use what it gives you to sustain it!🌱
Some tin cans have a white plastic lining. I'm worried about contaminating the food that I'm cooking with toxic burned plastic. So I'm going to be sure that my cans aren't plastic lined. 💖🌞🌵😷
i cooked on a rocketstove for 4 years, i used thick metal bars to elecate the wood a littke. the metal bars always deformed after a while /6 months > daily use....
can is a great idea, just gotta seal the can with metal ducting tape or rivets or tapping screws or drill holes and use wire.I would put sand around the outside of that or can system FLU
JB Weld (epoxy) should hold the cans together. The Dakota fire hole has a 1 ft diameter burn pit and a smaller tunnel coming into it. This creates a venturi effect. Rocket stoves are based on the Dakota fire hole. So my idea is to make a venturi (hourglass shape) in the chimney section. I don't have a solid idea on how to do it. Maybe have enough bricks in the stack so you can push the side bricks in a middle layer closer together to create the restriction. Try using a half brick on the back wall to accommodate the decreased diameter from the sides. I've had a problem getting the half brick cut squarely. Maybe on that one, turn a whole brick sideways (parallel with the side bricks). Alternate idea for venturi. Make the feed hole larger (2 bricks high) or smaller (how? cut height of a brick in half?) The venturi is used in the old style carburetors. Low pressure on the manifold side (away from the intake side) is where the fuel is sprayed in. Creates high pressure at intake side, low pressure (low pressure vacuum) on the manifold side. For a visual example of a venturi, imagine a multi-lane highway where construction blocks off one or more lanes. Traffic backs up coming into the funnel, then as cars get through the restriction they speed up. Once you have the venturi, you can play with the size of the restriction to see the effect of flame height, listen for roaring. A thought on the hardware cloth. I like the idea of a fire grate but HW cloth is galvanized. The heated zinc puts off toxic fumes. Better to go with a steel grate
What's your goal here, to make something that works better, lasts longer, or is portable (or can be disassembled)? Cans just aren't going to last long. I'd just get 2-3 feet of black pipe, weld the angle, maybe more like 110 degrees. Mortar all the bricks together permanently, filling the void with vermiculite insulation.
Hi. I like your try builds. You limit yourself with the tin cans, smaller flame. The build with mesh was.much better. Bigger n wider flame, but it you're just cooking on it, you need more embers at bottom. You don't need a high flame, just constant heat from below. Peace to you and yours
Adding the cans where you already have a brick hole space seems redundant and unnecessary.🤷♀️ Too much work! The first rocket stove video I ever watched had a missing half brick on like the second or third layer to allow for air flow. Wish I could find that design again.😊 Good luck with your creations.
I really like that the second improvement required no power tools. Thanks for the tips!
A metal dryer vent or water heater vent elbow works great. Cheap and easy. Also put the stick hole towards the wind so it will blow in to feed oxygen to the fire. Adding a 1" stick in the chimney helps the fire feed up to the pan. These tips made my stove work better. Going to change mine from 16 to 20 brick stove. Also saved the burner grate off the top of my old gas cook stove to put on top of it.
Nice video - like your narration. Funny, you and another channel both do these “back to nature” builds and then use a propane torch to start the fire!!
First mod is building a small rocket stove out of cans, supported by a rocket-stove-shaped pile of bricks. Seems like a lot of fiddly work to end up with a smaller stove. Second mod with the hardware cloth looks like a winner.
You nailed it, Eric! Could it be better? Well, maybe, but that second one is officially *Better Than Good Enough*. After that, it's all just goofing off. We're all welcome to goof off, because goofing off is fun, but for simplicity, when you're just going to go speed-fire in the back yard, now you know: A metal grating plus that many bricks, built with that height, and the job gets done.
That skill is especially useful when wood is wet, because with a fire that's high-temp, low fuel-consumption, you're able to cook larger fuel, driving off dampness so that you can get a larger campfire going. Again--you nailed it, great job, and as always, I really love your personality. The ethic of showing what doesn't work and then working your way toward what does work--that's the best example for anyone trying to develop a new skill.
Phil here from New Zealand we r a very diy country so we just think that u r totally great love yr videos u seem such a genuine guy to us good on u mate
Did the second one this arvo. Worked very well even my teenagers said so. Boiled a kettle for tea and heated oil for excellent poppadums. Many thanks from west wales. Diolch.
you could make a vortex rocket stove with the cans inside the bricks with the last one that you did with the mesh at the bottom to gain more air from underneath
Try metal downspout curve
Good idea! Thx for that. Eric.
@@gardenfork Be careful if it's galvanized- it will put off toxic fumes.
Absolutely true! Never use galvanized steel for heating around food! @@debbiej.2168
I made one of the coffee can rocket stoves that are on TH-cam, I wish there was a way for the fuel/wood to be gravity fed when using it. There isn't a ton of room for the sticks of wood and they tend to burn up quickly while I'm cooking. Trying to feed the fire and cook at the same time is a challenge. If the tube for the sticks was at an angle, I could use much longer sticks that would keep falling in as the ends burn.
Hi Jess, I’ve seen pellet rocket stoves that have the angle feed. Mbe a video? Eric.
Great video I just built 3 side by side rocket stove for the use of cooking on my problem is getting a good fire to start. Guess I need to get one of them propane burner things to start mine with. Thanks for showing us your babies cute cute..
I love this experimental style. I went with your last option & love it!
I believe the last rocket stove (using only bricks)will be the most efficient. A bit of advice, about five years ago, I built the same style brick rocket stove. Starting from the ground up, make it a maximum of seven layers of bricks, starting with the air intake layer, as the first layer of bricks. this will give brick stove, the maximum amount of efficiency for this style of brick rocket stove,(about as efficient as the household stove top). Keep an additional brick separate, to slide in front of the air intake as needed, to control the height of the flames.
What if you used a piece of stainless steel flue pipe? We have a small wood parlour stove we made a chimney for. I bet we have some extra pieces. Also going to try and use fire bricks.
Fire Bricks are WAY more expensive but worth every penny if you're doing this for continued survival needs.
Eric, you remind me of my cousin, Keith, he's always coming up with great ideas, and then he perfects them! Stay safe and healthy! ~Margie
One aspect of the "Rocket Stove" is ease of building for use during "unique situations," which may be happening soon.
This seems Labor intensive...
This is a goid thought, but maybe thought out more to make it easier to facilitate when under stressful situations...
I like that your thinking... Thinking is good...
Leads to the innovation!
Keep on thinking, your getting somewhere!!!!
Yes, life skills involve cerebral activity!!
Right On!
I have been obsessed with these for about 8 years. From what I’ve seen the heat will make quick work of the tin can chimney. The temperatures can be very high.
agreed, the can won't last too long
Rocket stoves are a fun project for a cool weekend in the fall.
I am going to try the liner method, looks like a great improvement.
If you do the cans again, fill the empty space between the brick and metal with sand.
A thought on the one with the hardware cloth. If you just cut it to the depth of the fire box you could put a few bends in it and make a trough that would allow you to put more wood in the fire box at one time. I have too many projects right now or I would give it a try myself and let you know the results.
Good thinkin'!
Great Video. Fire at the end was pretty high for cooking. Too much air is flowing thru so If you slightly cover the bottom opening of the rocket stove with a piece of tile, but leave a little space for air to cycle in. Now there is less air in, less flames. And the fire should last longer.
I am from Texas and am experimenting while I build one also. Also try putting an open can underneath the metal sheet. Just a thought if you are using it for cooking. If its just for heat or just chillin' out...what you made works just fine. Bricks seem better that the blocks. Great Video
Agreed, blocks won't last if you really needed this to feed your family. Bricks last and last! They are a lot more expensive but worth every penny, IMHOpinion!
Thanks, the no tools idea looks good, though somehow I missed how you made it
Would it be easier to use metal snips and just cut the can with the snips?
Mbe, but I like the sparks the grinder makes 😀 Eric.
i love your videos. you're a great guy Eric ! so this is a essentially an outdoor wood stove for heat... not for cooking. i like it !
A stove-pipe elbow?
Glad I found this channel!
Did the tin melt?
If you fill cans with water and then freeze them it makes them easy to drill into or cut without deforming them.
where do you find the half bricks ?
As I was 5 fire was fun, now I m 56 and fire is still fun😃
This is Awesome - how many bricks do you use? have you experimented with advantages of making it higher/lower?
Could you use the tin that is from the back of a dryer? Oh absolutely way easier using the pipe used for a dryer
More flame !! Fire is fun !! Great video thanks for sharing ;)
Fire! Thx Eric.
How about making the chimney out of tile pipe instead of tin cans using a ceramic tile saw?
That's a big improvement! Thanks for a great video.
Better than breaking more blocks! 😀 Eric.
What about cutting The can by drilling it with same sized hole drill.
How many bricks did it take?
Use a duct tube crimping tool (cheap) to make one can end fit into the other easily.
How many bricks on the screen stove
Try keeping the lower chamber for air only. And the upper chamber for fuel. Better or worse ? idk
Good idea. Thank you for sharing!
Thanks for watching! Eric.
@@gardenfork You are welcome! Thank you for taking the time to write to me, I'm pleased! 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
Would using the tin coiling used on dryer (dryer to wall piece?)
Unfortunately it would burn up
Looks good so are you still staying out of the city.
Hi Danny, our jobs are in NYC, so we have to be there most of the time. Some weekends we are up at the house. thx!
You need one of those pistol thermometers. Then we’d have some data on which is hottest.
greetings from germany..very well done
Pretty cool. You're making a stove pipe elbow
Oh yeah!
Instead of screwing the cans together, friction fit them, drill holes and then pop rivet the pieces together to make a continuous stack. Also you need to seal around the joints to get the best air draw. Maybe go with a plaster of paris? I think they are pretty cheap, that's what everyone uses to make tin can forges.
🌱Lv ur true spirit! Ur Mantra ‘use what you have is Golden! If you are truly and seemingly off the grid, then bricks/stone drives it! Any physical tool can make this happen! You can do this with out prefab tools in earth/ground, and leave no trace! Be true to: Align with earth, and use what it gives you to sustain it!🌱
Huh?!
Guy have you ever made a coal forge or even gas forge? I'd be interested in seeing what you come up with. Your rocket stove might be on that track.
Hi George, I have a neighbor who made a propane forge to make knives, i'll ask him. Thx! Eric.
Some tin cans have a white plastic lining. I'm worried about contaminating the food that I'm cooking with toxic burned plastic. So I'm going to be sure that my cans aren't plastic lined. 💖🌞🌵😷
very instructive
i cooked on a rocketstove for 4 years, i used thick metal bars to elecate the wood a littke. the metal bars always deformed after a while /6 months > daily use....
Good to know, he!
Love your Labs !!!!!
I like the clay fire stove used by the Chinese youtube Lin Ziqi...the brick one reminds me of that.
can is a great idea, just gotta seal the can with metal ducting tape or rivets or tapping screws or drill holes and use wire.I would put sand around the outside of that or can system FLU
like the second idea too, :) great work , I have to way to make 2nd option better, props
Good idea
How about welding itt
THAT is an idea , thx! Eric.
It’s mostly brake and repeat. Dogs are beautiful
JB Weld (epoxy) should hold the cans together.
The Dakota fire hole has a 1 ft diameter burn pit and a smaller tunnel coming into it. This creates a venturi effect. Rocket stoves are based on the Dakota fire hole. So my idea is to make a venturi (hourglass shape) in the chimney section. I don't have a solid idea on how to do it. Maybe have enough bricks in the stack so you can push the side bricks in a middle layer closer together to create the restriction. Try using a half brick on the back wall to accommodate the decreased diameter from the sides. I've had a problem getting the half brick cut squarely. Maybe on that one, turn a whole brick sideways (parallel with the side bricks).
Alternate idea for venturi. Make the feed hole larger (2 bricks high) or smaller (how? cut height of a brick in half?)
The venturi is used in the old style carburetors. Low pressure on the manifold side (away from the intake side) is where the fuel is sprayed in. Creates high pressure at intake side, low pressure (low pressure vacuum) on the manifold side.
For a visual example of a venturi, imagine a multi-lane highway where construction blocks off one or more lanes. Traffic backs up coming into the funnel, then as cars get through the restriction they speed up.
Once you have the venturi, you can play with the size of the restriction to see the effect of flame height, listen for roaring.
A thought on the hardware cloth. I like the idea of a fire grate but HW cloth is galvanized. The heated zinc puts off toxic fumes. Better to go with a steel grate
Oh! The one with the double chamber is the ONE.
What's your goal here, to make something that works better, lasts longer, or is portable (or can be disassembled)? Cans just aren't going to last long. I'd just get 2-3 feet of black pipe, weld the angle, maybe more like 110 degrees. Mortar all the bricks together permanently, filling the void with vermiculite insulation.
My rocket stove is self cleaning so I don't have to disassemble for ash removal
Great thank you
Hi. I like your try builds. You limit yourself with the tin cans, smaller flame. The build with mesh was.much better. Bigger n wider flame, but it you're just cooking on it, you need more embers at bottom. You don't need a high flame, just constant heat from below. Peace to you and yours
Good to know Kiki, the tin can one was this idea that wouldn’t go away so I wanted to try. More to come! ✌️
i would just buy water heater exhaust duct. Should work great
Excellent fun!!!!
Hack saw....the mini kind
Hvac aluminum tape.
Spike and Andy are QT's!
it's a little bit ironic that a metal can all by itself actually makes a great rocket stove 😂
heat metal ducting tape , or tapping screw better l;like u said
GardenFirek or should that be GardenFlamek? Great entertainment. Just need that pan cooked pizza on the top of the rocket stove!
The exhaust would be too smaill. A rocket stock has the exhaust bigger than the wood inlet.
Flitting to fit pack sand around it let's cook
Like the videos keep it up. Give me some good ideas. I have a piece of 24 inch pipe.Uhm
Wow no smoke! That means it’s a super hot fire…
Ditch the cans
Like for a wood stove
exactly!
Adding the cans where you already have a brick hole space seems redundant and unnecessary.🤷♀️ Too much work!
The first rocket stove video I ever watched had a missing half brick on like the second or third layer to allow for air flow. Wish I could find that design again.😊
Good luck with your creations.
First!
hitting the camera with bricks is very annoying. please don't hit the camera anymore.
Too much!
I love your Tips and i love your little Helpers . Last year i realized the Rocket Stove in a Bucket...
Greetiings from Germany
:-)