Rocket Stove Mass Heater
Rocket Stove Mass Heater
Rocket Stove Mass Heater
The sticks stand straight up. Only the bottom ends of the sticks burn. The fire burns sideways. Since the heat riser is insulated, it gets freaky hot. This causes a strong convective current. When the hot gasses hit the barrel, it gives off a lot of heat, which cools the gasses which get much smaller and easier to push around. The gasses that exit are usually just carbon dioxide and steam. The real magic happens with the heat riser. The strong convective current is what makes the air get sucked in through the wood feed so that the fire burns sideways and the smoke doesn't come out. It is also the place where it gets so hot that all of the smoke is burned. Here (right) is a much better image showing the mighty power of the insulated heat riser, reburning the smoke and powering the whole system.
The first picture below represents the most thorough rocket mass heater design I have ever seen. Followed by the rocket mass heater that was created from that design. These are both the products of the leaders in rocket mass heater innovation, Ernie and Erica Wisner, who have built more than 700 rocket mass heaters.
I've now given presentations and taught people how to make these. The question I am most often asked is: "If my current wood stove is 75% efficient, it seems the most room for improvement is about 25%. But you say you can heat a home with a tenth of the wood. Isn't that claiming that a rocket mass heater is 750% efficient? Wouldn't 100% efficient be the maximum?" There are two ways to answer this. 1) Measure the temperature and volume of the smoke leaving a conventional wood stove (very hot and a large volume) and compare that to the exhaust of a rocket mass heater (a little more than room temperature and a trickle). Far more heat stays inside with a rocket mass heater. 2) Let's do the math. a) A rating of "75% efficient" does not account for some of the heat that goes up the chimney to remove the smoke. The testing labs will use a number of either 14% or 16% for smoke going up the chimney. So the 75% number is actually 64%. Saying 75% is a conventional wood stove uses a lot of the allowed and sells more wood stoves. heat to push the smoke out of the house b) The rating of 75% was the most efficient result experienced in a laboratory with experts trying to get the most efficient numbers. So while a wood stove might be able to achieve 75% efficiency in a lab, it rarely does in a home. An experienced wood stove operator will probably experience something more like 35%. Somebody using wet/green wood and shutting the dampers down a lot for a "slow burn" will probably experience something more like 5% efficiency (or less!) with a 75% efficient wood stove. Thus leaving a lot of room for improvement. Rocket mass heaters have no way to reduce the air flow for a slow, inefficient burn. An inexperienced wood burner will probably have a 90% efficient burn every time. Another question is about creosote. In a conventional wood stove, under inefficient conditions, creosote can build up in the chimney and start a chimney fire. The "chimney" in the rocket stove is the same thing as the heat riser. The rocket stove is designed to have a controlled chimney fire every burn. a rocket mass heater extracts as much heat as possible before releasing the exhaust
Here is Ernie talking about how replacing a conventional wood stove with a rocket mass heater and how he now uses 1/8 of the wood he used to use:
This second video is a day and a half workshop on building rocket mass heaters compressed into ten minutes:
My first attempt at building a rocket mass heater without somebody to guide me. This is an attempt at a semi-portable rocket mass heater. Plus a nice burn demo.
The latest from Ernie and Erica - complete with some innovations. This video focuses on how efficient a wood burning stove can be.
The latest from Ernie and Erica - complete with some innovations. This video focuses on how efficient a wood burning stove can be.
The leading innovators today on rocket mass heaters are Ernie and Erica Wisner. They have built over 700 rocket mass heaters and their recent designs are superior to the designs of systems five to ten years ago. They are the moderators for thewood burning stoves forum. If you like this sort of thing, then the next step is to buy one of these two designs:
6 inch rocket mass heater plans $20 for a 13 meg PDF of detailed plans and instructions
8 inch rocket stove mass heater plans $35 for a 9 meg PDF of detailed plans and instructions
inch rocket mass heater plans $50 for a 26 meg PDF of detailed plans and instructions
Check out all of the wood burning stoves offerings from Ernie and Erica.
Ernie and Erica's book "Art of Fire" goes into detail on all sorts of fire based inventions, and heaps of things most people never knew about fire. It covers the foundations of rocket mass heaters and the predecessor, the rocket stove. And the predecessor to that: the fox stove. Rumford fireplaces, pocket rockets, masonry heaters, brick ovens, cob ovens, earth ovens, ox cookers and on and on and on ...
Although a lot has happened since this book was written, this book still has a lot of good information. It has explanations on how Several people haveburning been able to scrounge over several months so that the construction cost ends up near zero. Here are some this type of wood stove works in parts general. Rocket Mass Heater Book of the materials you might want to look for, complete with links to be able to purchase them in case you cannot find them otherwise: fire brick sand clay duct 55 gallon barrel 55 gallon stainless steel barrel (Ooooo - fancy!) 30 gallon barrel perlite high temp thermometer Here is another rocket mass heater workshop. This one is building the rocket mass heater into a greenhouse
And this one shows the rocket mass heater barrel prep. Complete with an excellent demonstration of the rockety stuff - check out that smoke reburn!
Here is Ernie's conventional wood stove / rocket mass heater hybrid, which gives a lot of info on how a rocket mass heater can heat a space with 90% less wood than a conventional wood stove:
This is my grand video on my portable rocket mass heater. This features four huge innovations: a wood frame aesthetic (a bit rough, but the trail is now blazed for better wood workers); portable (can be taken apart and put on truck in less than an hour; can be taken off of a truck and built in a little over an hour); a heat riser that goes all the way to the ground instead of sitting on bricks; the thermal mass is a collection of pea gravel and river rock (that allows air to pass through) instead of cob. This video has a lot of details of construction.
underfloor heating and hot water with a rocket mass heater portable rocket mass heater
underfloor heating with a rocket mass heater - plus an exhaust bypass the original rocket stove and butt warmer thread at permies