Visitors Now:
Total Visits:
Total Stories:
Profile image
By Backdoor Survival (Reporter)
Contributor profile | More stories
Story Views

Now:
Last Hour:
Last 24 Hours:
Total:

Building a DIY Rocket Stove

Thursday, November 8, 2012 1:52
% of readers think this story is Fact. Add your two cents.

(Before It's News)

8088229297 14e8bb782a o Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor SurvivalRocket Stoves are pretty neat.  Common among campers and backpacking enthusiasts, rocket stoves are relatively new to urban dwellers or those that do not spend a lot of time outdoors.  But wait – here come the preppers who seek fuel efficient ways to cook outdoors when the grid goes down.  Not to make light of the situation, five years ago I had no idea what a rocket stove was nor did I know how they worked.

How times have changed.

While there are many commercial rocket stoves (and I own two including the Solo Stove Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival and the EcoZoom Versa) Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival an efficient rocket stove can be had for as little as a couple of bucks as you are willing to do a bit of work.

8087990310 a4a7e5c039 n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor SurvivalBut first, just what exactly is a rocket stove?

According to Wikipedia, a rocket stove is an efficient cooking stove using small diameter wood fuel which is burned in a simple high-temperature combustion chamber containing an insulated vertical chimney that ensures complete combustion prior to the flames reaching the cooking surface.

Seems simple enough, especially when you consider that rocket stoves are found more commonly in third world countries where wood fuel sources are scarce so an efficient system for converting twigs, branches, pinecones, leaves and other bits of biomass to fuel is essential to cooking.

Now as good as I am around the kitchen, in the garden and with the home and domestic arts, building stuff comes not so easy.  So I asked Backdoor Survival sponsor Ron Brown who is a retired engineer and really good at this stuff to help me out with some detailed instructions for building a DIY Rocket Stove.  He has convinced me that the process is easy and cheap, even for someone like me!

A Bit of Background

Ron told me that many years ago he made some maple syrup. Lacking any guidance, he constructed a boiling-down arrangement consisting of a simple campfire under a kettle. It takes 13 gallons of tree sap to make one gallon of syrup and he made several gallons. It was delicious but he burned a mind-boggling amount of firewood in the process.  Not at all efficient and not something you would want to do in a survival situation.

Improvised rocket stoves that are common around the world come in lots of designs and various configurations.  Their common advantage stems from a principle whereby three sides surround the fire while one side remains open. This facilitates combustion of the fuel and the ultimate creation of heat.  Of course, “real” rocket stoves are double-walled and have insulation between the walls.

What we will be describing here uses just a big, institutional-sized tin can with one wall.  Buy hey, it works.  And besides, 80% of the efficiency improvement over an open campfire (Ron’s estimate) comes from the basic three-sided feature while only 20% comes from the insulation.

The Almost Free DIY Rocket Stove

To get started, you are going to need the following:

Materials:

1    No. 10 size steel can (institutional size) You can also use a 3-lb. coffee cans or a one-gallon paint can
1    cast iron trivet (check the Dollar Store for this)
1½ cups marbles, small rocks, or gravel
1    hinge
1   “turn button door catch”
2   bolts for door-legs (size 8/32 x 3) with 4 nuts
5   sheet metal screws for door hinge & door catch

Tools:

Utility knife
Hammer
Can opener
16-penny nail (sharpened) to serve as a punch
Screwdriver
Pliers
Vise
Short length of 2 x 4 (to clamp in vise and use as support when cutting/punching can)

1. Cut off the can’s top and save it. Empty the contents, rinse out the can, then cut a rectangular hole to make a door in the side of the can. The can shown here is 6″ in diameter and 7½” tall. The door is 5″ wide and 4½” high. The bottom edge of the door is 1½” above the bottom lip of the can.

To cut out the door, I support the underside of the metal with a stick of wood clamped in a vise and simply cut the sheet metal with a utility knife (the kind with the replaceable blade). Admittedly, this method takes a fair amount of strength and not everybody will be able to do it this way.

8087989444 780a70c80d n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival     8087988446 ea3fe0ef13 n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival

An alternate method is to use a sharpened nail and punch a row of small holes along the perimeter of where you want the door to be. Punch the holes as closely together as possible. Then use a knife or a hacksaw blade to cut just the webbing between the holes. It’s a bit slow and tedious, but it works.

Tin snips are not practical for this job. Tin snips have jaws the width of your finger. We want a narrow slit plus four square corners.

2. Put one small hinge in the bottom-center of the door. Fasten it to the can with either small nuts-and-bolts or sheet metal screws.

8087988691 d80c191263 n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival     8087988224 4ee6f9b8a4 n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival

3. Install 2 bolts near the top of the door to serve as legs when the door is open. In use, the door stays open most of the time and serves as a mini-table to support the fuel-wood that we feed into the flame.

4. Install a small metal “turn button door catch” to hold the door closed when it’s not needed. As shown in the pictures, I fashioned a catch from “plumber’s strap.”

5. Punch a row of holes around the bottom of the can to let in air. Or, cut triangular holes using a church-key style can opener. These holes are down near the bottom lip of the can but are in its sidewalls, not in the can’s bottom.

8087989435 a751a39e54 n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival

6. Put gravel or small stones or glass marbles in the bottom of the can. You’ll need about a cup and a half. (Marbles are best because natural stone contains moisture which can turn to steam and split a stone in half when it expands. POW! It doesn’t always happen but, if it does, it will get your attention, guaranteed.)

8087991335 a21b9f67fd n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival     8087990455 ee3a2e2c49 n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival

7. Punch lots of holes in the upper can lid that we removed in step #1. Place it inside the can, on top of the marbles or gravel. The lid-punched-with-holes is then the floor upon which we build our fire.

Combustion air enters through the holes we punched in step #5, circulates between the marbles, comes up through the holes in the floor, and feeds the fire with oxygen.

8. Oh! Lest I forget. The Dollar Store trivet will come to you painted. That paint will bubble and scorch off in its first use. Scrape away whatever remains.

9. In use, put a flat stone or a layer of firebrick under this stove. Glowing bits of wood will leak out from time to time.

10. Think safety! This is a live, burning fire, nothing to joke around with. Leather gloves, pliers to use as tongs, a fire extinguisher or bucket of water . . . all excellent ideas.

Some Extra Credit Hints

8087990052 27e8dc9b1b n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival

When used as a rocket-stove top, turn the trivet upside down if you’re cooking with a large pot or griddle. The legs on the trivet, pointing skywards, support the griddle. You can’t block off the top of the can (what amounts to a chimney) completely. There must be some space around the bottom of the pot or griddle for smoke to escape.

This stove can be used as a small charcoal grill. Despite its crude appearance and obvious limitations, it works well. Once started, it boils water faster than the gas range in the kitchen.

By the way, neither Ron nor I have discovered where the “rocket” part of the name comes from. Maybe it just sounds sexy. Perhaps far more relevant is the question, “What’s for dinner?”.

8087987892 22df0786e5 n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival     8087988967 b237a7d6f8 n Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival

The Final Word

Factory made rocket stoves are great but they will set you back about a hundred dollars on Amazon Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival and elsewhere.  These are highly efficient and look “pretty”.  But as Ron says:

For my money, seeing as how we’re burning pine cones, twigs, and scrap lumber . . . and seeing as how this is for emergency use, not day-to-day cooking for life . . . and seeing as how the factory-made model is just as dirty to clean out as this one . . . and will carbon up the bottom of your pots and pans just as quickly . . . I’m gonna opt for the improvised/free version. Free is good.

Just keep in mind the following disclaimer:  Use this rocket stove outside. If you would not start a campfire in the middle of your kitchen countertop then don’t use this stove in the middle of your kitchen countertop. Don’t lay your bare hand on the trivet-top to see if it’s hot and ready to cook. Don’t pour gasoline on the flames to see what happens. Don’t toast firecrackers on the griddle. And do be careful of the raw edges on the sheet-metal door; they’ll cut you. This last bit is for real.

Enjoy your next adventure through common sense and thoughtful preparation!

Gaye

PS – My sincere gratitude goes out to Ron for his help with this article and especially for the photos. His wit and sense of humor continually amaze me. Be sure to visit Ron’s website at Lanterns, Lamps & Candles.  His e-book on CD is also amazing!

Bargain Bin: Cooking outdoors?  Then for sure you need some cast iron goodies.  Try these – I own all of them

Lodge Logic 12-Inch Pre-Seasoned Skillet Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival: This purchase changed the way I cook. I se my cast iron cookware for everything from salmon, to bacon and eggs, to biscuits. For under $20, there is no excuse not to own this survival basic. Don’t forget the Lodge Set of 2 Pan Scrapers, a must have for cleaning those food bits from your cast iron cookware.

Lodge Dutch Oven/Camp Stove:  I originally purchased this Dutch oven because it was so darn cute.  But over time, I have learned to love it for its versatility.  Remember, a camp stove is designed so that you can bake with it by arranging charcoal on top of the lid as well as underneath the Dutch Oven itself.

Ove’ Gloves Hot Surface Handler:  I cannot say enough about these hand and arm protectors.  I have permanent scars from hitting my arm on the rack of my oven.  I can only imagine what I would look like if I did not use these with my cast iron cookware.  Forget the colorful silicon hot pads.  These are 1000 times better!

Four Silicone Brushes Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival:  I call these”mop thingies”.  Great for layering a nice thin coat of oil on your cast iron pans.

Lodge 5-Quart Double Dutch Oven and Casserole with Skillet Cover:  This is another cool piece.  This Dutch Oven does not have legs and is designed for indoor use – but it can be used outdoors too.  Just don’t forget the Ove Gloves.

Lodge Logic Pre-Seasoned 15 Inch Cast-Iron Skillet:  Similar to the 12” skillet only bigger.  Actually, quite huge (and yes, I finally have one!).

FN C911 Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor SurvivalBe sure to shop the Emergency Essentials Monthly Sales Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival some great deals – typically 20% to 30% off.  One of my favorite items on sale this month is the Stir-Fry Combo.  It contains Asian Style Chicken, popular vegetables, and other ingredients perfect for creating a flavorful stir-fry.  The sale price is $84.99.

Other October specials include Freeze-Dried Roast Beef Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival at $39.99 (about $10 off), the Mountain House Classic Assortment Bucket Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival (also about $10 off), Clarified Butter Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival at $6.99 (normally $8.50), Honey Oat Granola at $8.99 (normally $11.95) and more.

Want to help support Backdoor Survival?  Purchases earn a small commission and for that I thank you!

Need something from Amazon (and who doesn’t)? I earn a small commission from purchases made when you begin your Amazon shopping experience here. You still get great Amazon service and the price is the same, no matter what.

Shop the Backdoor Survival Amazon Reader Favorites
Shop Amazon Tactical – Great Selection of Optics, Knives, Cases, Equipment  Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor Survival

Like this and want more?
CLICK HERE to receive Backdoor Survival Posts by Email (usually on Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday)
CLICK HERE to sign up for the new Backdoor Survival Newsletter! (Periodically)
CLICK HERE to visit Backdoor Survival on Facebook (updates posted every day or so)

Spread the Word – Tell your friends: Share Backdoor Survival with your friends. All you need to do to send them a short email. Now that was easy!

Shelf Reliance Virtual Party: Are you a fan of Shelf Reliance and Thrive products? Backdoor Survival is hosting a virtual, online Shelf Reliance party with discounted party prices and some special packages not normally found at the Shelf Reliance site.

7741697900 971277534d o Building a DIY Rocket Stove   Backdoor SurvivalStill on sale is the Shelf Reliance® Deluxe BPA Free 55-gallon Barrel Water Storage System.  This is a fabulous deal at only $107.80 for a complete kit including:

1 Expandable Water Pump
1 Advanced Water Filter (100 Gallon Capacity)
1 RAD Water Filter (100 Gallon Capacity)
1 Water Barrel Adapter

Building a DIY Rocket Stove is the latest article from the SurvivalWoman at Backdoor Survival.



Source:

Report abuse

Comments

Your Comments
Question   Razz  Sad   Evil  Exclaim  Smile  Redface  Biggrin  Surprised  Eek   Confused   Cool  LOL   Mad   Twisted  Rolleyes   Wink  Idea  Arrow  Neutral  Cry   Mr. Green

Top Stories
Recent Stories

Register

Newsletter

Email this story
Email this story

If you really want to ban this commenter, please write down the reason:

If you really want to disable all recommended stories, click on OK button. After that, you will be redirect to your options page.