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Post by dkrocketstoves on Mar 18, 2012 15:06:46 GMT -8
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Post by woodburner on Mar 24, 2012 12:48:52 GMT -8
Ok, it's small, but you won't get much heat out of it. I doubt there will be enough to cook on.
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Post by sierramog on Mar 29, 2012 19:36:33 GMT -8
I am new to this great forum and looking forward to learning more. Seeing the small model is encouraging to me. I hope to one day make a double rocket for heat with one barrel and cook with the other in a 60 sq ft camper.
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Post by dkrocketstoves on Apr 3, 2012 10:41:15 GMT -8
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vic
New Member
Posts: 2
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Post by vic on Dec 28, 2016 19:22:42 GMT -8
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Post by dave17 on Jan 5, 2017 7:30:41 GMT -8
This is a topic I'm interested in. My 'brain storm' was on the topic of ultralight through hiking, specifically for the Appalachian trail in the Eastern US. Take a Caldera cone type setup, but without the vent holes and build a mini rocket stove into the inside of the side, with the exhaust venting out the back of the cone. Similar to this setup: www.traildesigns.com/stoves/caldera-ti-triThe thinking is that it would act like a the bell heaters and boiler already being built on this forum. My hope is that it could also act as a shelter heater. Anybody try anything like this?
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Post by briank on Jan 5, 2017 21:23:26 GMT -8
I have an MSP Core 5 Titanium stove which is light, packs flat, burns as a rocket stove for cooking should, but can't be vented for indoor use.
For indoor use you could consider a Silverfire Hunter which can be vented. There's a YouTube video of it being used as a space heater but it's a TLUD, not a rocket. Not exactly small and light enough for hiking.
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Post by dave17 on Jan 6, 2017 3:55:32 GMT -8
What I had in mind was more like the core 5 you have there, but about 1/2 the size, and just inside a cone bell with the cook pot suspended down top/middle. Like the Caldera cone, but venting from the bottom/back in an add on passage on the ground.
I'll make a drawing tonight and upload what I'm thinking.
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