EMERGENCY HEAT for Indoors: Rocket Stove Burns Pellets or Firewood? Liberator Rocket Stove

EMERGENCY HEAT for Indoors: Rocket Stove Burns Pellets or Firewood? Liberator Rocket Stove

Dirtpatcheaven

1 год назад

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@scott1lori282
@scott1lori282 - 21.12.2022 13:43

Seems to like finger sized sticks. This thing is a different animal from a box stove.

As far as the burn chamber door, It's too tight and seems to expand even tighter while hot. I took mine to the bench grinder & shaved off maybe 1/16th from each side. I also rounded off the sharp corners. I sprayed with high temp black paint & now it doesn't bind up.

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@plandsurvival7144
@plandsurvival7144 - 21.12.2022 14:24

Here, we make black diesel and run it in a $150 Chinese diesel heater. We convert old engine oil into diesel at about 25 cents a gallon. Run our trucks on it too.

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@northerntrucker
@northerntrucker - 21.12.2022 16:41

Still amazes that you people are alive in States...🤣
For nordic people in Europe we get this infomation in our mothers breastmilk.

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@kathymarsden5757
@kathymarsden5757 - 21.12.2022 17:00

a well done informative video. Thank you for your work and information!

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@blessildajoy
@blessildajoy - 21.12.2022 17:07

Yeah, I'll keep feeding my regular cast iron and steel stove every couple hrs...

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@JoyoftheGardenandHome
@JoyoftheGardenandHome - 21.12.2022 17:36

Good thing I live where most burn wood and don't get offended by such...

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@rodkeh
@rodkeh - 21.12.2022 18:51

Cheer up Sweetie, it may be better than you think! Although they won't make your stove perfect (in other words, "As good as mine. But then my design is DIY only, so no UL certification.")
A few minor, inexpensive and easy to do modifications, could greatly improve, simplify and shorten the lighting process, prevent all smoking and possibly improve the burn and diameter of cord wood.

All you need to do is go to Home Depot's HVAC and home heating department and pick up two, 4" sheet metal pipe caps and go to a glass company and have a piece of tempered glass cut and safety-ground to slid and fit in the ash door slots but it should have a handle on top so it can be raised and lowered at any time, in order to damper and control the amount of fire. Maybe a cutout or a knob above the port, on an extended portion of glass?

I'm not sure why this stove is designed this way. Maybe it was specifically to allow pellets to be used as fuel but if you want to be able to light the flame with only a barbeque lighter or match and it will propagate immediately, you first, before you try to light the tinder or dryer fluff, you have to put the 4" sheet metal pipe caps, over the two 4" air intake ports at the top of the fuel feeder tube where you put the fire wood. Then you cover the fuel filler chute with it's cover. Now the only way for air to get into the rocket combustion chamber is through the cleanout door and as soon as you spark the tinder which is the last thing you put in, after you loaded the kindling. As soon as a flame starts, you close the new tempered glass clean out door, down to a small crack and leave it there until the fire starts to spread. With the door almost all the way down, that becomes the lowest point of the tube so as soon a flame starts, the fumes will rise, so they have to go the only way they can to rise up and that is now the rocket tube, since the the fuel filler and old air inlets are now closed off. Once a solid flame is established, probably less than a minute, you can open fully or even remove the new glass cleanout door. You only need to slide the cleanout door down a little if and when you want to turn the stove down, to control the heat to a certain degree. With the stove set up this way you may have more success with cord wood.

On the subject of fire wood jams. If you have an adapter made at a sheet metal shop, the adapter should be made from a 4" section of 26 gauge round pipe, the same length as your cord wood with a flat plate sticking out around one end, so that it can be slipped inside the fuel supply tube and rest on top. Now, anything you can put through the 4" pipe, will never jam the feed and a standard 4" sheet metal plug will make a perfect seal and ensure a nonsmoking stove. If you are loading sticks and twigs and fags in general. they should be fed in bunches the same size as the pipe and tied with a piece of string every several inches, so they can't shift and jam. To be on the safe side.

By the way, if you want to add fuel or check the level will the stove is burning, to avoid making it smoke, you first close the new glass door on the cleanout port. This chocks the stove and it will draw air from any where it can, so as soon as you open the fuel port, it sucks the air down the pipe, so it can't smoke. Once the fuel is reloaded, you close the port and open the cleanout and your back in operation with zero smoke and fumes. And you may not have to change anything back, just to burn pellets. Except the hopper of course.

If you make these very simple modification, I doubt that they will cost more than about $100 and I think you will be far more satisfied with you purchase. It's not your fault I wasn't ready so there is no reason to make you and the other owners suffer in leu of a few minor adjustments.

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@rascalwind
@rascalwind - 21.12.2022 20:36

you might need something to hold the wood off the bottom of the stove. The reason they have the grate for the pellets is to keep them off the bottom or they would go out as well. You might consider putting a couple pebbles or something steel in the bottom to hold your logs off the bottom and give the log access to air from underneath. I'm looking at welding up something similar and have that same requirement to keep the wood off the bottom of the stove.

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@jenniferj7588
@jenniferj7588 - 21.12.2022 21:06

Cut your wood the size of the tube and stack wood in tube and put the pellet tray in side or a grate to keep It off the bottom to catch the wood would make it like pellet burner.. You could fill the tube up just like you would like pellets... Just a hint might work ..Use a chop saw or hand saw or other tools to cut wood the size you need ...

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@martinjohansen8100
@martinjohansen8100 - 21.12.2022 22:09

I like burning pellets in mine, a lot less fiddling around. Plus I get twice the ammount of heat per pound of pellets that my Englander stove gave for the same ammount of pellets.

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@GeoffHou
@GeoffHou - 22.12.2022 00:01

I would try to start with 4" pellets with the grate and once going put a big piece in with the grate still in place. That way the flow on the burning surface remains big as now it gets smothered by the bottom plate.

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@AMC-eq3jr
@AMC-eq3jr - 22.12.2022 07:13

Grreat information. Thanks for your humility and sharing pertinent information about stoves.

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@Darthdoodoo
@Darthdoodoo - 22.12.2022 07:15

Get some vse grips for the lil metal plate or weld on a coiled handle so u can easily grab it

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@anthonymonaco5889
@anthonymonaco5889 - 22.12.2022 17:05

I would never get one.. Too much maintenance Every 1/2 hour .. . I'll stick with a regular stove with a catalytic converter. They burn for hours and hours with one load.

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@timklassen421
@timklassen421 - 22.12.2022 17:51

I like my natural gas furnace been using it for years

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@stoneinthefield1
@stoneinthefield1 - 22.12.2022 23:50

wood chips from a wood chipper might work? Tree trimmers pay sometimes to discard tree trimmings if you could get a truck load and dry it out it would be a ton of chips for nothing. Plus help the tree guy. In one day I would fill a box truck full. 7x12x3 about.

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@peterd1234567890
@peterd1234567890 - 23.12.2022 05:05

Could you use wood chips instead of pellets?

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@rodkeh
@rodkeh - 23.12.2022 10:29

Since my last comment I have seen several other evaluations of this stove and I see that my original speculation was correct. This stove is very precisely designed to burn pellets and that is why it works the way it does. But as we have seen, this method doesn't work well for cord wood, which I believe will be fixed by changing the direction of air flow because this is a rocket stove so it should be able to burn wood well. If it doesn't...

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@rdkndr1
@rdkndr1 - 24.12.2022 01:01

I just got ours. Seems ours stays at 600 on pellets. Havent tried sticks yet but thats what i intended to use primarily. My wife watches all your content. Between this stove and fireplace we can make basement very warm. Cats love that heat. They fight over heater space.

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@handcraftedluxuries1980
@handcraftedluxuries1980 - 24.12.2022 17:12

I wish i could have wood heat. Im allergic to pine in any form from wood smoke to pinesol.

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@stagman4611
@stagman4611 - 25.12.2022 12:29

Is it me. Or are rocket stoves supposed to run on thinner wood so you don’t use as much. To me if you wannna burn logs Get a log burner

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@proxywebs
@proxywebs - 26.12.2022 06:05

Why couldn't you just make a machine that mulches cord wood into pellets that will function in this stove?

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@akbychoice
@akbychoice - 26.12.2022 06:05

Why didn’t they put the lighting access door on a hinge ?

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@dave1secondago
@dave1secondago - 26.12.2022 21:54

thats a great stove for the house

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@ACE1542yt
@ACE1542yt - 27.12.2022 02:32

I have a traditional pellet stove for $700 and a backup solar generator system for $400 in NH where we just had a bad storm without power for 4 days and ran the stove the entire time. That extra $1,700 could buy a lot of pellets or more solar panels to make sure it will still work with bad weather.

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@judiehavard4903
@judiehavard4903 - 27.12.2022 21:45

You just can't beat the old wood burning heaters.

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@jameshupalo
@jameshupalo - 28.12.2022 06:28

Absolutely fantastic review. Thank you!

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@blade5054
@blade5054 - 28.12.2022 06:48

So just a thought that I had just kind of curious on what people's opinion would be or if you would be willing to try it now I know it wouldn't work with wood chips made from fresh wood but if you have wood that is seasoned like you're the wood that you're using to test this with if you put that through a wood chipper and then use the at least the gate at the bottom from the pellets maybe the whole Hopper system from the pellets would that work because if I could let my wood sit in season and I yes larger logs and all would take longer if they aren't split but it's not necessarily A Bad Thing and instead of taking the time to split it just running it through a chipper to process it so it'll fit in the stove and burn better I kind of sounds like it would work to me but I kind of I don't know just something tells me it would feel somewhere I just don't know where also I think the big difference or what would make a big difference is having a mass I know you're saying that you don't think the cord would heat up the mass but I think it would be a pain the first time you get the mass heated up but then if you put a couple small pieces and then light it you know an hour in the morning and an hour or even two at night just to recharge the mass I don't think it would be that bad I don't know I'm not saying it would necessarily be an entire home heater but I think it would be better than what it's currently doing and burn through less fuel

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@Blackford86
@Blackford86 - 29.12.2022 01:54

Is there a way to have air come from a vent from the outside so it’s not sucking air out of the room to burn hope that makes sense

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@Yahweh-Chase-Bella
@Yahweh-Chase-Bella - 29.12.2022 06:56

Anyone ever tell you, you look like Kristen Bell or whats her name lol

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@phucknuts.7065
@phucknuts.7065 - 29.12.2022 17:03

Just vote for Trump in 2024 and run it on oil.

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@improvisedsurvival5967
@improvisedsurvival5967 - 29.12.2022 21:45

I wanna add wood and go all nite not every hour will wake up cold

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@GrandmaGingersFarm
@GrandmaGingersFarm - 30.12.2022 00:24

UNFORTUNATELY, A pellet stove is NOT very Self Sustainable!

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@DonnaRatliff1
@DonnaRatliff1 - 02.01.2023 20:01

Tgank you for sharing. We're looking for another alt heat source but dont think a pellet heater fits our needs. We
don't the tiny fireplace in our house because it needs babysitting too much to keep burning. I like to drop a log and get on with whatever I'm doing. So decided on a wood cook stove too. Even though we're in the south, we live in the Appalachians and does get cold during winter.

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@beebob1279
@beebob1279 - 16.01.2023 03:48

From what I read, these stoves are designed to be used with a mass. The mass gets heated so the stove doesn't have to be burned constantly. This is why small pieces are used such as sticks to get the mass heated and then rely on the mass to radiate the heat.
Your pellets are nice for long burns.
If I buy one, my wife and I will need to move to a highly efficient house where a mass will be used to radiate.
But then if that's the case I'll have a masonry heater installed and solve the problem altogether

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@lancerudy6584
@lancerudy6584 - 17.01.2023 13:58

Great video. Thanks 😊

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@chadmiller8019
@chadmiller8019 - 12.02.2023 05:23

I'd really like to see different pellets like grass, leaves, paper shredding or any organic material for that matter. Or see some paper mache or sawdust briquettes. I also heard of people chunking up their cord wood and then just tend it every hour or so.

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@niklar55
@niklar55 - 07.03.2023 20:28

Wood pieces burn like a wick, so you need two or more pieces for them to burn effectively.
.

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@robertodiamato8114
@robertodiamato8114 - 26.05.2023 17:33

per comprarla mi mandate un link

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@failingdisciple938
@failingdisciple938 - 12.08.2023 19:06

Will this get as hot as a regular wood stove?

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@makeitpay8241
@makeitpay8241 - 16.09.2023 20:37

why doesn't she have a damper in the stove pipe?

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@justinw1765
@justinw1765 - 13.11.2023 06:17

A good rocket stove system has some major differences from the one shown in the video. One, the flue is much longer and typically is encased in thermal absorbing mass--the air that eventually comes out of the flue/chimney pipe is often not particularly warm, let alone hot. Most of the energy produced, has gone into the living space (rather than out the chimney). 2. the burn chamber and especially riser are typically much better insulated than it is here, which helps with a more full and thus efficient combustion. Most good systems use as little as metal as possible, as even stainless steel can't hold up well to the kind of temps and higher oxidation that the systems can, and often do, produce.

You do have to tend to a rocket stove system more than a traditional stove, but with a well designed and built system, once you get everything going and are building up heat energy into the entire system (typically takes a couple of days), you don't need to keep fires going constantly (if you do, you have more of an insulation problem than a heating problem). Good systems are significantly more efficient at extracting most of the energy from the biomass unlike traditional stoves.

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@davefroman4700
@davefroman4700 - 27.11.2023 05:19

I have to agree. They need to come out with a batch box version of this stove.

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@thegiggler2
@thegiggler2 - 01.01.2024 05:51

Wouldn't it be better if the flame is coming toward the fuel and not away from it?

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@Roel922
@Roel922 - 11.01.2024 20:49

This system could burn dried foodscraps too also nutshells are great fuel if you eat nuts often. Great inspiration for my next woodstove project even little modification to a stove I already have.

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@BowenOrg
@BowenOrg - 27.01.2024 23:04

With All Due Respect.... while this type of stove seems unique and "cutting edge".... I see it as the biggest pain in the derriere I've ever seen!!! : (
WHAT I DON'T WANT:
* I don't want to babysit a stove!
* I don't want to have to buy special sized wood!
* I don't want a limit on the size of the wood box, aka the fuel area!
* I don't want a stove that is dangerous... meaning that I don't want any chances for carbon monoxide going into my living area.... especially since it's odorless and colorless.
WHAT I DO WANT:
* I want maximum heat... THAT I CONTROL... to last as long as possible, hopefully overnight... AND I want to burn almost any sized log or material that I want.
* I want the safest stove I can find
* I want the stove that has multiple features so it does more than one thing... ie: radiant heat, forced heat with a fan, heating water etc etc.
WHAT I'M WORKING ON:
* I've "borrowed" every stove idea I could find from almost every inventor I could find.... PLUS using stoves and fireplaces for 40+ years myself.
* I'm designing one that will be incredibly safe which means it's completely sealed with no leaking of carbon monoxide... and yes, I'll have a separate air supply from outside the home for the firebox which is "pushed" up the chimney and NOT into the home.... that's the primary key of safety. It's also the key to heating the home.
* My design also has a blower fan... also with a separate air supply from outside the home.... because you don't want to have air being recycled from inside your house.... you want fresh air being heated up and that's more refreshing.
* My design heats an entire home automatically... basement, 1st floor, 2nd floor etc.... because the clean air is "pulled" from the outside, heated, and then "pushed" outward throughout the house... and that's the major flaw with 99% of all home stoves.
"Regular" home stoves "suck" the heated air OUT of the home and up the chimney and that is why you can't heat an entire home and why people spend so much money on wood.
* My design will also "feed" the stove with enough wood to last anywhere from 12 to 24 hours... depending on how hot you want your house to be and the type of wood you're burning... and the size of your home of course.
* My design also heats water as an extra bonus.
MAJOR BENEFITS:
* You save an enormous amount of money on firewood!
* It's safer!
* It's easier to operate and the homeowner is in control (not the stove) because there is a thermostat included!

Hopefully I can have a sample model built ASAP so I can document everything and upload some videos.

Amen
Retired, Veteran

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@ВладимирДобрый-ф9с
@ВладимирДобрый-ф9с - 27.08.2024 14:28

Здравствуйте дрова сгорают быстрее и постоянно нужно подкладывать , лучше топить пеллетом , один раз засыпал в бункер и можно заниматься другими домашними делами

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@PsychNurse.
@PsychNurse. - 20.10.2024 06:53

🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 awesome 😎

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@user-ts1fp4nm9y
@user-ts1fp4nm9y - 29.10.2024 06:19

I wonder if you could run your wood through a wood chipper and then use your pellet hopper???

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@vaughanellis7866
@vaughanellis7866 - 14.11.2024 14:26

If you are in an area that has a lot of Pine trees the cones will also burn well in these stoves, collect them in the warmer months bag them and store in a dry out building til you need them.

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