Big DIY Rocket Stove shop heater PT1

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2022
  • Because it gets cold in QLD Australia....
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 196

  • @francoisbouvier7861
    @francoisbouvier7861 Před 29 dny

    I finished my carpenter apprenticeship over 40 years ago. One instructor that was there before and long after, Toni. He reminded us that we were just beginning. That we should strive to learn every day going. forward. Words that I took to heart.

  • @hamishlittle
    @hamishlittle Před 2 lety +29

    Really proud of you mate!!! Very excited to watch this all unfold. Your giftings are really going to shine in this new season!

  • @chrischerry2787
    @chrischerry2787 Před 2 lety +6

    Congratulations!! You are living the dream of a lot of the people that watch your videos. Well done 👏 👍😊

  • @cybercamp2900
    @cybercamp2900 Před 2 lety +13

    You continue to inspire me with more than your welding skills, so much so that I am building my version of the rocket stove. Always enjoy and appreciate your work/life. 🙏🏻

  • @brimstonefootsteps4332
    @brimstonefootsteps4332 Před 2 lety +4

    My son left medical school for welding school and hasn't been happier. He made the decision on his own and decided to chase his own dream instead of the one we placed on him. Welding in a dying art and I am very proud of him for walking his own road. Great video on taking what could have been considered nothing and seeing the potential life in it.

    • @therealfinn1839
      @therealfinn1839 Před rokem

      please don't take this the wrong way welding is definitely not a dying art

    • @brimstonefootsteps4332
      @brimstonefootsteps4332 Před rokem +2

      @@therealfinn1839 It sure does seem to be in my neck of the woods. Most trade skills have turned into liberal art degrees. My hat is off to anyone who can still fix or make something "real" anymore,

  • @MathewBoorman
    @MathewBoorman Před 2 lety +2

    That looks really impressive. Really impressed that it leaves almost zero scrap, the offcuts getting used again. I had already picked up some heavy 150 tube, and planed to do something similar, but glad I did not progress yet, as your design is much better than I was planning,

  • @anthonycolbourne4206
    @anthonycolbourne4206 Před 2 lety +4

    13:38 That could pass for a piece of modern art right there! Love the angles on this one.

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 Před 2 lety +1

    Great job mate and good on you for supporting local industry.

  • @Paul.Douglas
    @Paul.Douglas Před 9 měsíci +1

    Those are absolutely the straightest freehand cuts I've ever seen!

  • @sunegroennebaek5283
    @sunegroennebaek5283 Před 2 lety +5

    I would love to have a tiny Rocket Stove. As small as possible but still big enough to heat a tiny house….. and think if you could make the exhaust in the dimension of an of-the-shelf chimney it would be great.
    You could expand your business to sell plans for your builds.
    Living on the opposite side of the world shipping is killing engagement…..
    Love your work and cool approach to CZcams.

  • @dzizus7440
    @dzizus7440 Před 2 lety +2

    Nice to see what your ideas are. I made a rocket stove this spring, and cooked twice a delicious goulash soup in a cast iron cauldron. Hungarian bograch soups. Perfect.
    Twigs in the amount of a bicycle basket will be enough for about 2 hours of cooking. Greetings from the EU.

  • @bogdangdumitru
    @bogdangdumitru Před rokem

    Good speach man! So nice of you to carry on the family tradition. Doing the thing you like for a living, it's huge. Keep up the good work. All the best!!!

  • @navigator902
    @navigator902 Před 2 lety

    Oh wow, glad your back mate... when I lite up my rocket stove.... Hope all are well including your wonderful family.... Cheers! So glad to hear of your inspiration... such a good thing.

  • @thecreativetake
    @thecreativetake Před rokem

    Awesome build! Very well made!!

  • @christophermclean5620
    @christophermclean5620 Před 2 lety

    Great work man it's good to see people chasing their dreams and accomplishing their goals. I'm jealous of your brother.

  • @Blougheed
    @Blougheed Před 2 lety

    this video taught my that I in fact am NOT good using a plasma cutter.. wow! well done!

  • @stephenbellini1225
    @stephenbellini1225 Před 2 lety +3

    Congratulations really pleased for you, after listening and watching your vids I know you’ll go far and only expand

  • @DerekWoolverton
    @DerekWoolverton Před 2 lety +8

    Congrats on striking off on your own. Customers are more of a headache than bosses, but you can wake up and decide not to be paid any day of the week you want. With a family in the US, insurance is the biggest headache/cost for going it alone. I always cheated and had a wife that worked.

  • @anniebooo
    @anniebooo Před 2 lety

    Congratulations, well done! All the best! Annie

  • @huxmetalworks7371
    @huxmetalworks7371 Před rokem

    Great job love your work thanks for sharing

  • @aussysurvival
    @aussysurvival Před 2 lety +1

    Well done mate. Good to see the skills being preserved.
    All the best.
    🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🦘

  • @yamati150
    @yamati150 Před 2 měsíci

    I love the fact that you're stick welding!! I have a hatred of MIG welding. I know, it's faster, but stick is old school and I love it!!
    I actually weld with TIG about 99% of the time because I usually am working with stainless or occasionally clean mild steel, but I appreciate using an old rusty PC of mild.
    Nice job!!!

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  Před 2 měsíci

      Yeah I love stick welding too, any chance I get I'll stick metal together with the old stick.

  • @Tunzbig
    @Tunzbig Před 2 lety

    I got the same linc 180c,
    nice work anyway, gotta love rocket stoves is always a million ways to make one :)

  • @BDL090754
    @BDL090754 Před 2 lety

    No its not rediculous, It's just another masterpiece, ( from a fellow victorian aussie, ) I'm gonna have to get me one of those plasma cutters, such a time saver. - Thank you for the video.

  • @stankrieger3598
    @stankrieger3598 Před rokem

    Good luck with this new business. I am 70 and thinking on starting me a small craftey business. But any way God's speed on this adventure keep me in touch

  • @mrlordmark72
    @mrlordmark72 Před 2 lety +3

    Congrats on apprenticeship, I just bought the J stove from your website a few weeks back it works brilliant.

  • @not-pc6937
    @not-pc6937 Před 2 lety

    Great video as usual- good luck on your new life direction 👍you’ve taken the jump and I’m sure your gonna land on both feet - cheers and keep ‘em coming 😁

  • @officialWWM
    @officialWWM Před rokem

    Awesome watching you grow and succeed. Congratulations on your duel trade.

  • @victoryfirst2878
    @victoryfirst2878 Před rokem +1

    When one loves what one does one never works a day in his life. PERIOD !!!!!!

  • @bigdaddy741098
    @bigdaddy741098 Před 2 lety

    Good luck with the new venture 👍👊

  • @paulgoodridge7957
    @paulgoodridge7957 Před 2 lety +1

    Been following you since you started very competent clever i wish you and family well and your business do well thanks from Wales.

  • @CPaulCounts
    @CPaulCounts Před 2 lety

    Congrats on everything you're accomplishing!

  • @joels310
    @joels310 Před 2 lety

    The one-line opener! Congrats on becoming a business owner!!!

  • @davekauffman8727
    @davekauffman8727 Před 2 lety

    Love the rocket stove, built one out of cinder blocks in order to burn up a lot of old broken pallets on my property without a lot of smoke, worked wonderfully. That hand soap reminds me of Lava here in the USA, might even be better, who knows? God bless!

  • @enoniemschybaniewiem1847

    Those welds are beautiful.

  • @shitheadjohnson2797
    @shitheadjohnson2797 Před rokem

    that looks like it works amazing.

  • @sgntbilco
    @sgntbilco Před 2 lety

    Hard work and diligence, I'll subscribe to that, with a shed as your office, it doesn't get better than that too. Good on ya!!

  • @Altruistic-Viking
    @Altruistic-Viking Před 2 lety

    Love the sign in the background 😄

  • @karakrantz1391
    @karakrantz1391 Před 2 lety

    Glad you now have a GREAT boss :)

  • @dah4x4
    @dah4x4 Před 2 lety

    Nice job! Heading to your website to buy one!

  • @Memento-_-Mori-_-982
    @Memento-_-Mori-_-982 Před 2 lety

    Good luck on your new venture!

  • @dougl8248
    @dougl8248 Před 2 lety

    Hey man I love the sign in the background. HAVE GOT to make one for myself.

  • @russelldold4827
    @russelldold4827 Před 2 lety +8

    Congratulations on completing your apprenticeship - fitter & turner is also my "mother trade". Although I later qualified as an engineer, I've never been sorry about my time on the tools, and now enjoy my workshop in my retirement.
    I'm a long-term subscriber, looking forward to Part 2!

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks Russell 👍

    • @579Jacob
      @579Jacob Před 9 měsíci

      Hey Russell, do you mind me asking what engineering discipline you entered and how you started after already having a career? In terms of affording the schooling for engineering, and the time needed while working? At least in my case I have considered the military for these benefits, and just curious how you made it. Thanks.

    • @russelldold4827
      @russelldold4827 Před 9 měsíci

      @@579Jacob Hi Jacob, I was fortunate to serve my apprenticeship as a fitter and turner with a South African mining company who supported anyone who applied themselves in their technical college studies. I was able to complete 4 block release study courses (equivalent to an engineering diploma in mechanical engineering) before passing my practical trade test. While working as an artisan and later as a technician, subsequent further studies through night classes at my own cost gave me entrance to write the examinations by which I qualified as a mechanical engineer at the age of 30. My wife and I agreed to hold off on starting our family until I qualified as an engineer - we were married for 7 years before my daughter was born.
      The South African system then allows one to study specific subjects in the electrical engineering field and thereby obtain certification as an electrical engineer.
      Certainly a career in the military would offer similar opportunities for advancement if you showed the necessary application in your studies. Good luck!

  • @seanyowies8532
    @seanyowies8532 Před 2 lety +2

    Congratulations on your new trade qualification.

  • @milkrecu
    @milkrecu Před 2 lety +1

    Wow. That looks like a keeper. Inspiring. Perhaps a sauna stove if I can keep the water out.
    Keep up your good work and congratulations on freedom however terrifying it may be at times.

  • @trutube7417
    @trutube7417 Před rokem +3

    The burn pit and the angle pulling the flame in very nice. Probably be able to burn for a while before cleaning

  • @mkase4697
    @mkase4697 Před 2 lety +5

    As usual, a nicely put together video. Nice to see you can wield that old buzz-box welder with your usual skill. Interesting design too. I have been hoping you would have another go at your water heater system. Any chance it is in the pipeline? I built a wood burner water heater system which I use to pipe hot water into a radiator in my workshop. Next step is I am collecting materials and chewing over ideas for a home heating system with a rocket stove heart. Hopefully I can pinch some more good ideas from you in the future! Keep up the good work!

  • @jvcyt298
    @jvcyt298 Před rokem +1

    I really didn't think that the draft from the flue would be that good, but I was pleasantly surprised. I guess that you could pipe the exhaust outside without any problems as well.

  • @Mark_Linford
    @Mark_Linford Před rokem

    Excellent Job done :)

  • @Marsmate88
    @Marsmate88 Před 2 lety +2

    Perfect timing for selling your own solid bar sand soap. Solvol have stopped making it recently and they only do the liquid soap. I prefer the bar soap as you can use the bar to scrub at tough spots.

    • @hoilst
      @hoilst Před 2 lety +1

      WHAT?!? That's a bloody outrage, that is!

  • @stevenmchenry9276
    @stevenmchenry9276 Před 10 měsíci

    Hey Aussie, great video

  • @davidrickard3143
    @davidrickard3143 Před 2 lety

    love your channel! explain< explain! I get what your doing! green horns don't. more info will go far mate!

  • @therealfinn1839
    @therealfinn1839 Před rokem +1

    I'm a boilermaker that's been in the trade for over 30 years all I'm going to say is this guy is pretty bloody good I honestly think you are not dual trade you are triple trade add boilermaker as well mate .Thats some of the best plasma cutting if ever seen free hand with massive thick chalk lines and your welding is pretty good as well.So Can This Guy Weld Yes

  • @kevindechambeau7762
    @kevindechambeau7762 Před rokem

    Great job.

  • @beachfiredude
    @beachfiredude Před 2 lety

    Great upload
    Thanks

  • @thisguy1890
    @thisguy1890 Před 2 lety

    Very interesting mate. Get amongst it aye.

  • @polehenge8237
    @polehenge8237 Před 2 lety +2

    Nice freehand plasma cutting mate. Not bad for a sheetie😉

  • @Srulio
    @Srulio Před 2 lety

    All the best for your future ventures

  • @geneticdisorder1900
    @geneticdisorder1900 Před 6 měsíci

    Frank is a weird looking squirrel ! 😅

  • @spiderbrandt4066
    @spiderbrandt4066 Před 2 lety

    I can relate I'm a 70 year old Fitter and Turner I have a small shop and I still love it , I like your heater I mite make one I didn't get what the pipe with the hols is for ( air flow ? ) , I'm in Qld and yes it dose get Cold here as I wright this I'm cold .

  • @vincentdegraaf2222
    @vincentdegraaf2222 Před 2 lety

    Granulation’s and good luck🍀

  • @tolbaszy8067
    @tolbaszy8067 Před 2 lety +2

    Great video! You have superb skills and excellent camera sense. How you have succeeded while being left-handed is remarkable! Do you weld mower decks? Thanks for sharing!

  • @tips8762
    @tips8762 Před 2 lety

    Smart wood stove

  • @correorodi
    @correorodi Před rokem

    you rock little aussi !!

  • @billpemberton3982
    @billpemberton3982 Před 2 lety

    Have you seen Lawrence Harrops rocket shop heater? His channel is Loz Harrop from the U.K. Very happy to hear you're doing it all on your own now. Cheers Mate.

  • @markfoster6110
    @markfoster6110 Před 2 lety +1

    Come to Canberra where you can learn about cold !! Great job look after yourself . Take care

  • @frankmiller6737
    @frankmiller6737 Před 4 měsíci

    Hello everybody! Sry for the interruption! I was just sleeping in that box until I was rudely woken up. I’ll just go hide somewhere else…

  • @janisvaskevics93
    @janisvaskevics93 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi, Frank!😁

  • @306champion
    @306champion Před 2 lety

    Good on ya mate, I'm sure you'll do really well.
    Must be the first time I've seen on the old arc welder.

  • @catgynt9148
    @catgynt9148 Před 2 lety

    Congratulations on your new employment position and the opportunities waiting for you to discover them. Which of your daughters will follow in your family tradition.?
    At some convenient, future time can you discuss your choices of cutting metals with torch vs plasma vs grinder cutting wheels. What you demonstrated in today’s video is an interesting example. The plasma cutting is significantly faster and exponentially more expensive than slower cutting wheels and drilling.
    Wishing you and your family a blessed week, a gentle harvest season and a profitable journey. Peace brother

  • @mutantryeff
    @mutantryeff Před 2 lety +3

    Beware of the welding fumes as they are reported to cause tinnitus

  • @markfryer9880
    @markfryer9880 Před 2 lety

    Plasma cutters are available for sale at Aldi this week in Melbourne Australia. Good to see you back on CZcams. Don't know why I didn't get the notification until I scrolled over your video today, 4 weeks late? You think that your the boss, when it is really the wife!
    Mark from Melbourne Australia

  • @micksmith9113
    @micksmith9113 Před rokem +1

    This project looks awesome, when can we see it in action?

  • @306champion
    @306champion Před rokem

    There so many videos out there with cr%^ music and the same music competing with the voice over which I cant tolerate. But whether it be bluegrass or jazz or whatever else, you always have easy listening, well timed and relaxing music. May I complement you on this, there are so many youtubers out there that have NO IDEA how to put a video together.

  • @cornel-5285
    @cornel-5285 Před 7 měsíci +1

    hello Frank!

  • @tomislavbudrovac8690
    @tomislavbudrovac8690 Před rokem

    Thanks Sir.🤑

  • @joeegriff6566
    @joeegriff6566 Před 6 měsíci

    “She’s wet”…helluva way to start the video😂

  • @philerasmus
    @philerasmus Před rokem +2

    Very interested in your work. Thinking about alternative ways to heat the chill Pommie home I was wondering if anyone had ever to reproduce the simplistic method used by the Swedish Admiralty in the 19th century? They had a furnace to heat cannonballs and red hot cannonballs were carried around the admiralty building and positioned in holders to provide heat in the various offices. It occurs to me that a system like that with an efficient rocket stove at the core could avoid the issues with in-house installation and flues etc. Yes cannonballs are hard to come by these days... but a foot length of railway track might be a handy alternative. There could be one in the stove and one in the house, swapping them over then it cools.

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  Před rokem

      That's is an interesting history lesson. I have been toying with the idea of using a hot air engine to pump water heated through a rocket stove. Lot more work in the setup but not as hazardous as handling hot balls.

  • @Joe_Bandit
    @Joe_Bandit Před 2 lety

    How can you see to follow your lines so well? When I'm plasma cutting I can't see a thing once my visor darkens.

  • @gavinh1449
    @gavinh1449 Před 2 lety

    Just curious why you switched from stick welding to mig?

  • @markjackson7467
    @markjackson7467 Před rokem +1

    Check out pulse detonation heaters - really efficient

  • @craigsymington5401
    @craigsymington5401 Před 2 lety

    STOKED for u bro!

  • @WVFG
    @WVFG Před rokem

    Hi mate, just subscribed to your channel, one question, "Do you always work this fast?"

  • @willyouwright
    @willyouwright Před 2 lety

    Bussiness ideas. Reduce how much you need to do. I.e. only build hard bits the rest can be assembled. Small assembly means lower freight cost. Also reduce cost of materials used. If people buy more of the cheap stuf and are just as happy. Raise the price of the good stuff. Your value is in your skill. If it's crappy repetitive work. Look at robotics or offer it to the customer to diy.. in bussiness time is money. Your time is valuable and should be reserved for complex or creative tasks. Also make sure the people around you are growing.. look for fundamental equations in your bussiness, I.e. how your trying to change stoves. Perhaps it's performance to weight. Or cost to weight ratio. Automate as much as possible.. Hope this helps

  • @raymondrobertson3869
    @raymondrobertson3869 Před rokem

    Hi this is Raymond from Scotland. Can I pick your brains. I am building a stove same as your shop heater and can only get 4” box section do I use the same sizes for the Venturi vortex or do I take a third of your sizes as mines is only 4 inch box.
    Keep up the great videos
    Regards
    Raymond

  • @yodab.at1746
    @yodab.at1746 Před rokem +1

    Nice build.... But to me, there's something missing.
    Nearly every rocket stove I've seen built has a fundamental flaw, not in the design of the body of the stove or the build, they're all great. It's a misunderstanding of the principal of how a rocket stove operates and the benefits of a correctly operating one.
    The concept of a 'J' tube was to cut down on smoke when cooking using wood as a fuel. Rural Indian households would traditionally use an open fire for cooking, the smoke issued led to high levels of lung disease. Using a J tube led to better combustion and cut down on smoke.
    The rocket stove advanced this idea so that the exhaust gases would have almost no particulates. This is achieved by extremely high combustion temps. To achieve this, maximum draw is used, the combustion chamber is insulated and the first part of the stack is lagged. This is to retain as much heat in the combustion chamber and stack to achieve fast and total combustion of the fuel. The exhaust gas is what is used for heating, rather than the body of the stove. Hence the sound of the running stove and the adoption of the word 'rocket'.
    Designs for space heating sometimes incorporate a barrel that sits over the body of the stove and stack, the exhaust outlet can exit the side horizontally because the draw for the combustion is created by the extremely hot stack inside.
    The best rocket stoves have a ceramic chamber a thin walled insulated ceramic stack because this part needs to heat quickly for ease of starting the combustion and achieving a draw quickly. If the stack is simply vented normally without the barrel chamber, the draw will tend to happen naturally, but if covered by a barrel as used in a mass heater, then the draw needs to develop quickly.
    Hope this is useful 👍

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  Před rokem +1

      I appreciate you sharing your knowledge, when I find time to finish filming part two, I will address some of these problems.👍

  • @kiyotakakaneko3602
    @kiyotakakaneko3602 Před 5 měsíci

    Is there any secondary air effect?

  • @Hazzy238
    @Hazzy238 Před rokem

    There's a heater called a smudge pot . Something you would consider putting your version of?

  • @TheBobbytables
    @TheBobbytables Před 2 lety

    I LOVE FRANK!!

  • @victoryfirst2878
    @victoryfirst2878 Před 2 lety +5

    Could you please tell me your logic in the shape of the rocket stove ??? How about the heat output ??? What is the percentage more of a standard 4 by 4 inch stove ??? Nice work and thanks.

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  Před 2 lety +9

      I neglected to go into that.
      I have found that when the burn tube is 90° to the riser the air flow doesn't always start off in the right direction. Adding the 15 degrees slope to the burn tube has given the hot air a head start in the right direction. It also stops ash from working it's way into the bottom of the riser.
      The tube in the bottom of the riser was intended to be air intake for secondary burn. It's value is yet to be seen.
      The slot behind the hopper is for air, when there is too much fuel in the hopper, this slot should still allow enough air into the burn tube for a clean combustion. I will cover the rest in the second video 🙂
      Heat output was great 🎉 warm up time was a bit long but once running it was really good.

    • @cybercamp2900
      @cybercamp2900 Před 2 lety +3

      @@LittleAussieRockets thanks for the insight. I hope to show you mine in a month or so. You were my great inspiration 👍🏻👍🏻

    • @victoryfirst2878
      @victoryfirst2878 Před 2 lety +3

      @@LittleAussieRockets Thanks for the pertinent information requested. Look forward to see the second video and congratulations for bringing life into this world. Peace and good luck too. vf

  • @bobboyer9440
    @bobboyer9440 Před 2 lety +1

    Is it safe to use this stove as a source of heat? Not sure if the insurance companies would agree.

  • @jimfitzgibbon5492
    @jimfitzgibbon5492 Před rokem

    I would like to see how you ran your exhaust with out losing all the heat threw that?

  • @hiruyuuy1095
    @hiruyuuy1095 Před rokem

    Hi, bought plans for the stove, missing size of the hole between burner and riser, also diamension for the pipe welded to the bottom of the riser. Look like something missing in the plans.

  • @davidwarren9738
    @davidwarren9738 Před 2 lety

    I love you videos... I wish I lived close to you. I'd probably try to come help you (free labor) every day after work. Lol
    Question: is there a reason you didn't weld completely around the wood supply areas. I see one gap on the top side and the sides on the bottom where the ashtray is. Love this stove and will be building it soon. But I wanted to ask questions before I welded it solid and screwed it up.

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks, David
      So the openings are there for airflow. Basically, if I completely overload the hopper with fuel, there will still be enough air to create a clean burn, so far it works great but I would add another 300 mm to the riser if I was building it again.

  • @willwork2fish261
    @willwork2fish261 Před rokem

    Is this safe to use on a enclosed shop?

  • @metheewatchakittikorn4796

    You could make a prototype and have some company produce it.

  • @user-fs3dg1po2z
    @user-fs3dg1po2z Před rokem

    I was sure there was going to be a big rat in that box. The possum was a nice surprise.

  • @valachimus
    @valachimus Před 2 lety

    Recently found and am enjoying your channel tremendously. Quick question: What is Frank? Pet? Friendly local wildlife?😄

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  Před 2 lety +1

      Frank is a Australian possum, he's wild and has taken up residence in our work shop. Friendly for the most part, and fun fact the female has a pouch like a kangaroo's.

  • @mikeintn6360
    @mikeintn6360 Před 7 měsíci

    I noticed you left a front and back gap on the magazine feed tube, assuming for draft air compensation. Have you found those gaps improve the draft and does it allow heavier loading of the mag tube with wood (like closer to 100% full)?? Thanks for your reply

    • @LittleAussieRockets
      @LittleAussieRockets  Před 7 měsíci

      The gaps allowed me to put a door on the hopper. I wanted to direct more airflow up through the grate into the coal bed to get a more complete combustion. From my testing on other stoves where I haven't had the gaps, these extra holes helped in getting a more complete combustion, not having as much charcoal left unburned.

  • @fisheater844
    @fisheater844 Před 2 lety

    Good onya