Blocks crumble pretty quick when you heat them with fire. Long term, you are far better off with fire brick, and/or flue liners. They are made to stand up to the intense heat of fire.
@@MaLiArtworks186 آجر نسوز را از فروشگاه مصالح ساختمانی یا تجهیزات شومینه میتوان خرید Refractory bricks can be purchased from the building materials store and the fireplace equipment store
For a quick emergency stove its not a bad iudea. I would try to avoid having to cut any blocks Remember in an emergency and there wont be any power to run a saw to cut the blocks. While this is true that the heating and cooling cycle will cause the concrete blocks to get brittle and crumble and fracture in a few weeks. It is a also true that most emergencies only last for one to two weeks. The concrete blocks will last long enough to meet the immediate need. They will last longer if they can be kept dry or covered when not in use. Also in some designs the blocks can be rotated around about once a week so the block that gets the most heat is moved to a cooler part of the stove. That will greatly extend the life of the blocks. The life of the stove could be extended for several months if a few extra blocks were kept in reserve. If I were going to build one for a hunting camp that would last for years I would as you say build it with bricks or bricks with a clay chimney liner. Looks like something that would be fun to play around with. Thanks for the video
@@johnndavis7647 This particular design is intended to be temporary. For long term use, tear down a fireplace chimney and use the fire bricks around the fire box.
👍👍👍for the nice, simple and easy to use rocket stove!We usually use those pine cones for fuels when i was young, i am from the Mountain Province in Philippines and we have lots of pine trees around so aside from the tree trunk, branches and twigs we used to gather the cones for cooking fuels too. We use dried pine tree saps to start the fire. That time we did not have electricity in our village that’s why we used all the time pine trees, not anymore this time because we have gas stoves/ovens and electricity.
I think that would work with only 3 blocks as well, and you could balance a big pot on just a few rocks on the corners. You could cook on it and even heat water for bathing. I lived in SE ASia for a year and we used a clay oven for EVERYTHING - cooking, tea, warmth, dishwater, bathwater, laundry.
WW II survived, my house 12 feet deep flood we survived, 2018 hurricane Micheal, 2019 hurricane Retain survived... We must have knowledge of how to survive. I’m 76, easy & light work. Without big men help I can put together. Thanks showing this simple & easy rocket stove.
I just got all the blocks today and cant wait to try it. I went with 5 blocks to see how a larger chimney works and a 6x8x16 as a base. I actually found a diamond masonary circular saw blade so making the special cutout block will be easier than trying to chisel and hammer and risk cracking the block.
It's not that hard to break a brick or block. That's what is so cool 😎 is how we can take an idea and add our own twist on it and learn from eachother. If we could all put effort into helping one another instead of competing with one another 💕. WE COULD LITERALLY MOVE A MOUNTAINS 🏔️ 🏔️.🙏📖🗡️⚔️🛡️✌️💐💐
I'd be careful about trying to boil water or cook in most tin cans. I get it as an emergency use, but I think I will try to save some food safe cooking vessels. Nice to see a rocket stove made with fewer blocks. Makes it easier to prepare for when needed. Thanks for the demo.
For everyone talking about the blocks cracking or even exploding, granted over time this will degrade the block and create cracks. However if you are just using this as a chip fire to sterilize water and maybe heat up some food for one person then the amount of heat energy creates by such a small short term fire is unlikely to build up inside the block to cause such a dramatic explosion.
Will boil a lot faster if you use a cover. I find mine at second hand or thrift stores like Goodwill. A paint can also makes a nice system too. New clean cans available at most large paint or big box home improvement stores.
One must keep in mind that most tin cans, unless specifically made for food use, have a soldered seam. Most solder has lead; plus, an acid of some sort is used as a solder flux.
Y usando todo el bloc sin partirlo se puede elaborar doble parrilla haciendo primeramente su base plana dejando sus orificios libres para que pueda subir la flama hasta se le puede adaptar un tubo de fierro para el escape del humo; entre los blocks de altura se puede instalar una rejilla de quitar y poner para carbón y finalmente sus parrillas que tal. Gracias por compartir saludos.
Very cool! (Wish this was up the other day I just ordered a bio mass stove lol) but still good if out and need to make one like in a disaster .... I found the frog interesting too... very brave to be that close to you and and the fire there last part of the video.
Fur cones burn and the place was littered with them, use what's to hand as my survival instructor told us. In fact I used to collect material en route to camp. Sticks, fur cones, grasses that are dry, bark & punk wood. I might also have some kerasine or Vaseline covered cotton balls or pads in a tin. Potassium permanganate and glycerine to light my fire, ferrous rod and steel or just have a few bic lighters on you kit. I keep an emergency kit, upstairs and downstairs of my house. A brew kit of powdered milk, t bags, instant coffee, sugar and or cookies/biscuits are good for moral and energy supply.
Survival Common Sense -Well I was kinda hoping to purchase them separately and not the whole stove to get one part. But I get the point, I will need to go to an appliance parts store. My stove is an electric flat glass top. Can’t borrow from my inside stove
I believe the taller chimney is better. It makes more draft and it provides more area to complete combustion. As it draws harder, more air is blown into the fire, thus making it hotter, Right?
I have several old concrete driveway culverts, tried one for burning trash. NOT ! Cracked 2 or 3 places and fell apart first use. It was 12/14 inch x 3 ft. Porosity and make-up of the concrete has a lot to do with it, fire brick is just special. lol The incinerators I have seen in alleyways out west were made of concrete, so the type of concrete used obviously makes a difference.
Mindless foolishness using concrete blocks. Concrete is a chemical hydrate which means it is held together by water molecules. These water molecules are released under high heat - sometimes with explosive results. Every mason knows to use firebrick in any area subject to solid fuel heat. Anybody using concrete blocks around a fire is a fool. This stove is not something really fantastic with a gee whiz name like "rocket stove". This is merely a well ventilated solid fuel stove
This blocks WILL CRACK ! I have played many times and they all cracked at one point. Fun for one time OK, but not long emergency need. Surviving (short term) maybe. In any case we had fun with this center blocks in all kind of set ups. There is many ways to do it. You don't even have to have the "L" shape. We even used three center blocks stacked on top of each other and 3 red bricks for legs and fire was just intense as "L" shape rocket stove. HAVE FUN !
Your purified water is escaping as water vapor... Should devise a way to capture that water vapor because that is distilled water, true purified water.
If you build this on the ground you can use a 2x8x16 top cap cinder block or to get up a little higher a 6x8x16 for the bottom. Would it burn even better with an additional block on top so as to have a deeper chimney ?
I see you asked this question a few years ago and didn't get an answer. Just in case you still need it, it's a faro rod, harbor freight sells them for a buck or two. It's a metal piece with a razored edge and a stone. When scraped over it throws a spark that lands on your "material" for starting a fire...a cotton ball is great.
@@cek7940 Wow, yes that's a long time! Thanks for your response. I had forgotten about the half blocks. I appreciate you getting back to me. I can view the video again. Hope you're doing well thru the pandemic.
Would this work a metal sprinkler head with carbon felt rolled up and placed inside with the female water connector having a copper pipe with a screw cap on the end designed to stick out the side of a rocket stove so you can fill it with alcohol with the sprinkler head being just above the air intake to the chimney with a little bit of paper to start the rocket stove by heating the sprinkler head eith alcohol vaporizing the alcohol with the up draft for a very hot very clean burning flame to boil water very easy? Just thinking of a way not to have to use wood or some other fuel source.
SurvivalCommonSense I tried lightly tapping the block on the one side and the whole block broke. I tried scoring the block on both sides and very gently tapping on the scored area and the second block broke. Went to home depot and lowes and they do not sell the 8" square block with an end out. Guess I am done trying to make this one work but will get some bricks and try your basic brick rocket stove.
Junk food; potato chips, top ramen make good fire starters. So I've heard. You can pour antifreeze over the top ramen. Or take lint from a clothes dryer. Put it in egg crates and cover it with melted wax. Another great fire starter.
I bought that three-sided brick. In any wall, such as one demolished in a disaster, there will be similar bricks. Otherwise, some careful tapping with a hammer could break out one side.
Survival Common ty for reply. Sense ive tried makin a stove with a half brick that was sort of a jagged edge and it didnt work. It didnt vent right. So i would try to buy one of those if they come that way😊
A nice, quick vid that shows a few good tips and the use of the product in a couple of minutes. A good short-term improvised solution.
Seen plenty of rocket stoves. The can mod to the air inlet was new to me. Thanks!
Minion Man I keep tinkering. Sometimes I come up with a better design.
O que não falta aí é combustível, essas pinhas secas e galhos, bem estocados, duram muito anos 👍🏽👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Blocks crumble pretty quick when you heat them with fire. Long term, you are far better off with fire brick, and/or flue liners. They are made to stand up to the intense heat of fire.
Where can I buy fire bricks?
@@MaLiArtworks186
آجر نسوز را از فروشگاه مصالح ساختمانی یا تجهیزات شومینه میتوان خرید
Refractory bricks can be purchased from the building materials store and the fireplace equipment store
@@farhad_tulip Thanks
For a quick emergency stove its not a bad iudea. I would try to avoid having to cut any blocks Remember in an emergency and there wont be any power to run a saw to cut the blocks.
While this is true that the heating and cooling cycle will cause the concrete blocks to get brittle and crumble and fracture in a few weeks. It is a also true that most emergencies only last for one to two weeks. The concrete blocks will last long enough to meet the immediate need.
They will last longer if they can be kept dry or covered when not in use.
Also in some designs the blocks can be rotated around about once a week so the block that gets the most heat is moved to a cooler part of the stove. That will greatly extend the life of the blocks.
The life of the stove could be extended for several months if a few extra blocks were kept in reserve.
If I were going to build one for a hunting camp that would last for years I would as you say build it with bricks or bricks with a clay chimney liner.
Looks like something that would be fun to play around with.
Thanks for the video
@@johnndavis7647 This particular design is intended to be temporary. For long term use, tear down a fireplace chimney and use the fire bricks around the fire box.
👍👍👍for the nice, simple and easy to use rocket stove!We usually use those pine cones for fuels when i was young, i am from the Mountain Province in Philippines and we have lots of pine trees around so aside from the tree trunk, branches and twigs we used to gather the cones for cooking fuels too. We use dried pine tree saps to start the fire. That time we did not have electricity in our village that’s why we used all the time pine trees, not anymore this time because we have gas stoves/ovens and electricity.
You can cook a lot with pine cones!
Excellent stove for making it with left over scraps, thanks.
I think that would work with only 3 blocks as well, and you could balance a big pot on just a few rocks on the corners. You could cook on it and even heat water for bathing. I lived in SE ASia for a year and we used a clay oven for EVERYTHING - cooking, tea, warmth, dishwater, bathwater, laundry.
This is the best video in class of brick stoves
Thanks. There are a lot of copycat posts out there.
Good cheap way to clean water and a place to cook or stay warm. Thank you.
Very good,well presented , no excess words wated and economically short in length.
Thanks! I won't watch a long video, and I don't think most people will.
WW II survived, my house 12 feet deep flood we survived, 2018 hurricane Micheal, 2019 hurricane Retain survived...
We must have knowledge of how to survive.
I’m 76, easy & light work. Without big men help I can put together.
Thanks showing this simple & easy rocket stove.
great video. Might try flipping the grate over to get better heat transfer.
I'm going to use this incarnation for a while, then come up with the improvements.
when it says "biomass" does that mean poop?
Yes. You could dry dung, as the people on the treeless prairies did and burn that. Let me know how you come out on that!
Brook, while biomass does include 'poop', most people are thinking of sticks, leaves and twigs when they talk about biomass.
turn the grate upside down it will get you closer to the flame and still allow good airflow, I liked your vid.
You could turn the grate over. It isn't necessary.
theresa mcpherson
I just got all the blocks today and cant wait to try it. I went with 5 blocks to see how a larger chimney works and a 6x8x16 as a base. I actually found a diamond masonary circular saw blade so making the special cutout block will be easier than trying to chisel and hammer and risk cracking the block.
It's not that hard to break a brick or block. That's what is so cool 😎 is how we can take an idea and add our own twist on it and learn from eachother. If we could all put effort into helping one another instead of competing with one another 💕. WE COULD LITERALLY MOVE A MOUNTAINS 🏔️ 🏔️.🙏📖🗡️⚔️🛡️✌️💐💐
I'd be careful about trying to boil water or cook in most tin cans. I get it as an emergency use, but I think I will try to save some food safe cooking vessels. Nice to see a rocket stove made with fewer blocks. Makes it easier to prepare for when needed. Thanks for the demo.
I like the easy, smoke free operation.
It's nice!
For everyone talking about the blocks cracking or even exploding, granted over time this will degrade the block and create cracks. However if you are just using this as a chip fire to sterilize water and maybe heat up some food for one person then the amount of heat energy creates by such a small short term fire is unlikely to build up inside the block to cause such a dramatic explosion.
steven heckert VG VG
Explosion? Says who? survivalcommonsense.com/safe-to-use-concrete-bricks-in-rocket-stove/
They dont explode ( myth ) but they may crack if wet
Very interesting thanks
خیلی جالب بود ممنونم
Very good ideal. Thank
Will boil a lot faster if you use a cover. I find mine at second hand or thrift stores like Goodwill. A paint can also makes a nice system too. New clean cans available at most large paint or big box home improvement stores.
A cover would add to the efficiency.
One must keep in mind that most tin cans, unless specifically made for food use, have a soldered seam. Most solder has lead; plus, an acid of some sort is used as a solder flux.
Ingenious! Awesome resource in a grid down situation. I'll definitely be using this!
Very nice with the tin can
Thanks for the video. I'll try it. I´m gonna buy a beer right now for the tin vent. Good idea
Francisco Javier Ferrés waste management?
Thank you for posting this video. From buffalo NY
Thanks for watching it!
great Idea Thank you so much For Such a great and Smart idea. Thank you and Have a great Night.
Thank you you are a lifesaver
Genius; no other words, I won’t forget this‼️ 👍 🇺🇸
Thanks - It works really well!
Thanks for caring. Great info."..
Y usando todo el bloc sin partirlo se puede elaborar doble parrilla haciendo primeramente su base plana dejando sus orificios libres para que pueda subir la flama hasta se le puede adaptar un tubo de fierro para el escape del humo; entre los blocks de altura se puede instalar una rejilla de quitar y poner para carbón y finalmente sus parrillas que tal. Gracias por compartir saludos.
Thanx liked the vid and the comments are so informative and helpful!
Thanks for watching!
Useful tip: cover cooking pots. You'll get a faster boil with less fuel and lost water. Also prevents smoke-tainted water.
True,
Thanks for posting.
Thank you Sir.❤
Good video...thank you for sharing.
Awesome Idea !!!
It works well, too.
great stuff sir !! thanks so much for this video !! Blessings
Ingenious! I'm gonna use this.
Thank you great demonstration
Thank you
Very nice! I need to try this!
Very cool! (Wish this was up the other day I just ordered a bio mass stove lol) but still good if out and need to make one like in a disaster .... I found the frog interesting too... very brave to be that close to you and and the fire there last part of the video.
LOL!
Lovely
thank you. good idea
Good build
Fur cones burn and the place was littered with them, use what's to hand as my survival instructor told us. In fact I used to collect material en route to camp. Sticks, fur cones, grasses that are dry, bark & punk wood. I might also have some kerasine or Vaseline covered cotton balls or pads in a tin. Potassium permanganate and glycerine to light my fire, ferrous rod and steel or just have a few bic lighters on you kit. I keep an emergency kit, upstairs and downstairs of my house. A brew kit of powdered milk, t bags, instant coffee, sugar and or cookies/biscuits are good for moral and energy supply.
Awesome
Brilliant! Thanks for posting!
Thank for teach your ideas🙌🤝❤
turn the stove iron grid over
+d12r34e56w was thinking the same thing!
grate minds
I was about to suggest the same thing
Excellent idea.
hey man , this s great !!!
The best one...
from RJ , BRASIL
good work.. a collar would cut the wind ..a cake ring or two skirts cut from a #10 can or any 5 gal bucket..
good job
All this is find and dandy. however getting the tin can is a cinch, but where do you find such perfectly fitting cinder blocks and metal grate.
The blocks - any basement wall. The grate - there are four of them on any gas stove.
Survival Common Sense -Well I was kinda hoping to purchase them separately and not the whole stove to get one part. But I get the point, I will need to go to an appliance parts store. My stove is an electric flat glass top. Can’t borrow from my inside stove
@@guillermone1 I got mine at the local Re-Store. Or check thrift shops or shops run by Habitat for Humanity. They are dirt cheap.
have you ever had the blocks explode due to the heat?
Never: www.survivalcommonsense.com/build-a-brick-rocket-stove-is-it-safe-to-use-concrete-blocksfeed/
thank you
A good use of common sense. Thanks.
Outstanding TY!
How do you cut the concrete if you don't have a concrete saw?
Half blocks are typically in a wall somewhere. You just need to find them.
Great idea
Are the two base blocks open at both ends? It would have been nice to see both sides and not just the front.
Just the one.
Oh - so you placed the first block open side down....
@@theinkbrain Yes.
Nice! Thanks
I believe the taller chimney is better. It makes more draft and it provides more area to complete combustion. As it draws harder, more air is blown into the fire, thus making it hotter, Right?
What was that rod that you used to start the fire? It was pretty cool.
Nice
I have several old concrete driveway culverts, tried one for burning trash. NOT ! Cracked 2 or 3 places and fell apart first use. It was 12/14 inch x 3 ft. Porosity and make-up of the concrete has a lot to do with it, fire brick is just special. lol The incinerators I have seen in alleyways out west were made of concrete, so the type of concrete used obviously makes a difference.
Mindless foolishness using concrete blocks. Concrete is a chemical hydrate which means it is held together by water molecules. These water molecules are released under high heat - sometimes with explosive results. Every mason knows to use firebrick in any area subject to solid fuel heat. Anybody using concrete blocks around a fire is a fool. This stove is not something really fantastic with a gee whiz name like "rocket stove". This is merely a well ventilated solid fuel stove
What kind of lighter was that?
Thank you ! 👏🌹👏
About the grate you put on tge top. You said it was too high. Did you consider turning it over? Where more of the grate itself touches the block.
u could filtering and bleach method...using a sweat sock to filter and capful of bleach
Will boiling water kill the germs from beavers?
If you're referring to giardia, yes it will. www.cdc.gov/healthywater/drinking/travel/backcountry_water_treatment.html
You have to boil for 10 minutes to kill everything.
que monada de cocina 👏👏
Sí, es lindo, pero también funciona muy, muy bien.
Really interesting video.
This blocks WILL CRACK !
I have played many times and they all cracked at one point. Fun for one time OK, but not long emergency need. Surviving (short term) maybe. In any case we had fun with this center blocks in all kind of set ups. There is many ways to do it. You don't even have to have the "L" shape. We even used three center blocks stacked on top of each other and 3 red bricks for legs and fire was just intense as "L" shape rocket stove. HAVE FUN !
Might crack and still do just fine, still stay in place.
+Thomas Ervin TRUE
How did you get U shape block?
I bought mine at the brick store. They are common in block walls - look for areas that have pipes etc.
Thanks
turn your grate over
so how do you create a tight fitting, three sided block. . . in an emergency?
+godrick godrick Very carefully chip out one side with a hammer.
karate
What di you use to cut into half of the whole bricks?
I broke them in half with a hammer.
@Teresa B That one did.
FUKIN GENIUS NICE VID DUDE
flip the fire grate over. Looks like the can would fit inside.
+Greg Belcher It would. The higher location means you should be able to simmer the water a little easier.
well, i'm kind of a stovie and i liked the video. thx
Thank you for the video to shape it? How did you cut the brick?
I bought it that way. It a very common configuration.
@@survivalcommonsense Whete did you buy it? I haven't seen the U shape cinder block at the big box stores?
Those blocks are very common at most masonary stores. They are common in foundations when piping or wiring needs to be placed.
@@survivalcommonsense Thanks. I will see if we have a masonry store in my city.
Ask any bricklayer or stone mason.
Thats awesome Jack!
Your purified water is escaping as water vapor... Should devise a way to capture that water vapor because that is distilled water, true purified water.
edb strung not trying to purify water... Just kill off harmful critters
just put a pan cover over it
Distilled water is dangerous for drinking long term !!!
Drinking pure h2o is bad for you? Ridiculous.
Yes and if you distill it a dozen times it is even better? You don't get the minerals you need from distilled water.
have you tried to flip the gas grill over so the gap is smaller?
+Marty Pankey Yeah - flipping the grill works great if you need more heat.
Me gustó uno que hiceron con orno y que no salía nada de humo,porque tenia,horno,para meter la leña para sacar el ollin de la chminea.
How do you improvise that metal table?
Go find a welder and barter.
Cool man i like i will tried that
Does the wood go inside the small can or op top of it???
On top.
@@survivalcommonsense -ok. Got it. Thank you/
That's cool.
Do the bricks crack ? Like when you use regular bricks ?
Over extended use they might. If making a permanent structure, use fire bricks and cover the stove when not in use.
If you build this on the ground you can use a 2x8x16 top cap cinder block or to get up a little higher a 6x8x16 for the bottom.
Would it burn even better with an additional block on top so as to have a deeper chimney ?
LEGAL !!! PARABÉNS AMIGÃO .LIKEEEEEEEEEEEEE
Muchos gracias señor.
Dont need tin can if u keep the wood spaced
It works better, and the draft is more consistent with the can.
Hi. what was the tool you used to light the fire?
I see you asked this question a few years ago and didn't get an answer. Just in case you still need it, it's a faro rod, harbor freight sells them for a buck or two. It's a metal piece with a razored edge and a stone. When scraped over it throws a spark that lands on your "material" for starting a fire...a cotton ball is great.
@@cek7940 Wow, yes that's a long time! Thanks for your response. I had forgotten about the half blocks. I appreciate you getting back to me. I can view the video again. Hope you're doing well thru the pandemic.
Nice emergency rocket stove
I took about 10 or so bricks and made a rocket stove in 90 seconds. Worked great - made skillet popcorn.
It'sa great design!
Ferrocerium powder, where can you buy that? Maybe Amazon.
P S And where you get half concrete blocks? Estimated price?
Other than that, good video. Thank you.
Would this work a metal sprinkler head with carbon felt rolled up and placed inside with the female water connector having a copper pipe with a screw cap on the end designed to stick out the side of a rocket stove so you can fill it with alcohol with the sprinkler head being just above the air intake to the chimney with a little bit of paper to start the rocket stove by heating the sprinkler head eith alcohol vaporizing the alcohol with the up draft for a very hot very clean burning flame to boil water very easy? Just thinking of a way not to have to use wood or some other fuel source.
I have no idea if that would work or not. Let me know if you try it.
How did you break out or cut that one block?
I bought it that way. It's a standard block.
SurvivalCommonSense I tried lightly tapping the block on the one side and the whole block broke. I tried scoring the block on both sides and very gently tapping on the scored area and the second block broke. Went to home depot and lowes and they do not sell the 8" square block with an end out. Guess I am done trying to make this one work but will get some bricks and try your basic brick rocket stove.
Joe Mufich
I got my three-side block at a contractor's brick and tile store. It was no problem to get one.
Junk food; potato chips, top ramen
make good fire starters. So I've heard. You can pour antifreeze over the top ramen. Or take lint from a clothes dryer. Put it in egg crates and cover it with melted wax. Another great fire starter.
I have been saving all of my dryer lint but have been eating all my potato chips...
Turn the stove grill thingy upside down to lower the can...
Yep.
How did you cut out that brick? U need to elaborate
I bought that three-sided brick. In any wall, such as one demolished in a disaster, there will be similar bricks. Otherwise, some careful tapping with a hammer could break out one side.
Survival Common ty for reply. Sense ive tried makin a stove with a half brick that was sort of a jagged edge and it didnt work. It didnt vent right. So i would try to buy one of those if they come that way😊
@@ParttimePilgrim Any masonry store should have them, and they don't cost much.