Smokeless Burn Barrel

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КОМЕНТАРІ • 4 тис.

  • @Marc-Vickers
    @Marc-Vickers 2 роки тому +3578

    I got one of those plastic 50 gallon drums and it smokes no matter what I do.

    • @davidwillard7334
      @davidwillard7334 2 роки тому +63

      GONE ! TO !! OBLIVION !!

    • @IIISWILIII
      @IIISWILIII 2 роки тому +169

      Wait. You're burning stuff in a plastic barrel??

    • @greenidguy9292
      @greenidguy9292 2 роки тому +356

      @@IIISWILIII Yeah doesn’t everyone?

    • @flyingsword135
      @flyingsword135 2 роки тому +65

      🤪

    • @bsod5608
      @bsod5608 2 роки тому +282

      You should probably try to add som old used motoroil or something similiar

  • @emmanuelwilliams4177
    @emmanuelwilliams4177 2 роки тому +1452

    God bless you, sir. this economy has hit me hard, but I ran with your idea, I added a fourth leg. I went past the secondary combustion and created a 3rd combustion section which almost makes the burn cycle smokeless. I burned off all the paint on the barrel and added high-heat paint. thus keeping the barrel looking sharp. since I started selling them 6 months ago, I've managed to catch up financially and feed my children. I can only say god bless you, sir!

    • @jamessever8936
      @jamessever8936 Рік тому +48

      Can I buy one? How much are they? Where are you located?

    • @craigwomer5239
      @craigwomer5239 Рік тому +28

      Where are you located and how can i buy one..how much?

    • @iamthewelcher
      @iamthewelcher Рік тому +125

      Dang !! Now that's my America !!

    • @TrueBlue2024
      @TrueBlue2024 Рік тому +17

      Same here, I would like to buy one.

    • @KylesCreations
      @KylesCreations Рік тому +26

      do you have any footage of using this 3rd chamber? did you add another barrel?

  • @nridgeway1662
    @nridgeway1662 7 місяців тому +61

    Myself and my 90-year-old dad built a barrel following your instructions. The legs were structurally unsound, so I cut them off and replaced them with three outside mounted steel plates and we added handles on the sides to ease of moving the barrel around safely before and after use. The thing is awesome, we've named ours, "The Dragons Breath!" it incinerates whatever we throw at it. Thanks for your video and the chance to do a project with my retired sheet metal worker father.

    • @househunterhomes
      @househunterhomes 3 місяці тому +4

      Great comment..... I love the updated adaptations

  • @Eau1983
    @Eau1983 8 місяців тому +143

    Your instruction and attitude are top tier. Nothing to prove, just simple, straight-forward instruction. Well done.

  • @averagejoe8213
    @averagejoe8213 2 роки тому +173

    Quote of the week!
    "We all have something to gain by inspiring each other."

  • @melanielawson4127
    @melanielawson4127 2 роки тому +768

    Written instructions based on the video:
    Parts needed
    • two steel drums (same size)
    • angle grinder with cut off wheels
    • drill with 1/8th inch bit and #4 step unibit
    • template material (rigid plastic or metal)
    • sharpie
    • Tape measurer
    • Optional oil for drilling
    • Jigsaw and metal blades
    • Sheet metal screws.
    Inside drum
    1. 5 inches from the seam, draw a solid line
    2. 1 inch further from the seam, draw a dashed line
    3. Use an angle grinder with a cut off wheel. Cut the middle section at the seam and the solid line
    4. Ratchet strap the center to hold it
    5. Cut the top and bottom sections of the side of the barrel (at seam and solid marker line)
    6. Cut through the rim at the seam
    7. Cut through the rim at the dash line, across the bottom of the rim to the solid line, and across the rim at the solid line (leaving a one-inch section with side wall and no rim)
    8. Cut off the entire capped end of the drum (including the rim)
    9. Ratchet drum with tabbed edge on the inside.
    10. Fasten drum together with a few self-tapping screws from the outside in (maybe three or four total).
    11. Once secure, screw it together every few inches from the inside out. Remove the original screws and put them from the inside out also.
    12. Use the angle grinder to cut off the excess screw from the outside. Leave a few threads so it doesn’t unhinge itself.
    13. Flip it over, with rim side up.
    14. Using a 3.5-inch square template, beginning at the seam, draw squares under the rim and label the squares 1-18. The seam area will not be marked.
    15. #6, #12, #18 cut the sides and the bottom (not the rim part).
    a. Cut just a little bit into the rim from the inside out to allow you to fold them up.
    b. Bend them in an all the way up.
    c. Use plyers to fold in the sides of the three tabs to make sturdy legs. From the top, they should look like be C’s, with the hump facing out.
    16. Cut the bottom, left hand side, and top (under the rim) of the even numbers. Gently fold these in a little past 90 degrees
    17. Flip over and stand on the legs.
    18. Draw two lines around the unrimmed top. One 1.5 inches from top, one 3 inches from top.
    19. Draw vertical lines from the 1.5 inch line to the top. Cut the vertical lines with grinder. Take off the outside edge of the double layer section.
    20. Gently fold the tabs in (can use plyers if you want).
    21. Drill a 1/8 hole in the 3-inch line, at the middle point of the tab above.
    22. Use the unibit #4 to drill those holes out. (oil can help)

    Outer barrel
    1. With open edge facing up, put one line at 1.5 and one at 3 inches around the drum.
    2. Use 1.5-inch square template to draw vertical lines on the 1.5 to rim area.
    3. Use the 1.5-inch square template to draw vertical lines staggered from the last lines, in between the 1.5 and 3 inch horizontal lines.
    4. Use 1/8 th drill bit to draw pilot holes for each, then use the #4 unibit to drill those holes out.
    5. Flip it over so closed end is up.
    6. Mark out a circle the size of the diameter of the inner barrel (likely 20 inches if it is a standard barrel, but check).
    7. Drill a hole with the #4 unibit, then use a jigsaw to cut out the hole. (Save the disc).
    Assembly
    1. Put the outer drum over the top of the inner drum, with the holes on the bottom of the outer drum. It should seat, with the outer drum possibly resting on the sheet metal screw in the seam. It should seat between the bent tabs and the holes in the smaller barrel.
    2. Use one fastener per leg to screw the inner and outer barrels together.
    3. The disc saved from the outer barrel.
    a. Remove about ¾ inch from the outside edge using jigsaw.
    b. Draw 8 solid pie lines
    c. Draw 8 dashed lines between the solid lines.
    d. Draw a ring ¾ inch further in from edge.
    e. Use unibit to drill a hole at the inside solid line and solid pie line.
    f. Draw a 4-inch diameter circle in the middle.
    g. Use unibit to drill a hole at the solid pie line and the 4 inch circle line intersection. (8 total, in line with the ones drilled previously)
    h. Using Jigsaw, cut from unibit holes to the dash lines on the left and from inner to outer unibit hole
    i. Use plyers to bend the tabs up, will look like fan blades.
    j. Put it in the barrel, with the folded tabs down.

    • @vairaharik8265
      @vairaharik8265 2 роки тому +9

      Thanks for writing that out. I did something similar, with screen shots.

    • @genkiferal7178
      @genkiferal7178 Рік тому +29

      thank you for taking time and effort to write it out for us all

    • @iamthewelcher
      @iamthewelcher Рік тому +11

      Jeez! I'd love to have your time!!

    • @TheConpuentes
      @TheConpuentes Рік тому +23

      Not all Heroes wear capes. thank you Melanie

    • @carlosbonifacio3378
      @carlosbonifacio3378 Рік тому +8

      Wow. I would have been daunted by the instructions if I had not seen the video first. But great analysis anyway. I've printed them out for when i build mine.

  • @salvothegermanshepherd4399
    @salvothegermanshepherd4399 4 місяці тому +24

    Probably one of the best instructional videos out there.

  • @AusInSacramento
    @AusInSacramento 5 місяців тому +29

    We need more Dads like this guy who take time to show their kids how to make things and how things work. Great burn barrel too, I'll be making one soon.

    • @beatcat1265
      @beatcat1265 4 місяці тому

      I think hes sexy! 😂

  • @HarleyCabral
    @HarleyCabral 2 роки тому +2177

    The ability of this guy to draw a circle by hand is way more impressive than the barrel itself

    • @tomvaughan5611
      @tomvaughan5611 2 роки тому +8

      P

    • @Eaterofeaterofpies
      @Eaterofeaterofpies 2 роки тому +18

      16:51

    • @HarleyCabral
      @HarleyCabral 2 роки тому +7

      @@Eaterofeaterofpies eeeeeexactly, thankyou

    • @davids4063
      @davids4063 2 роки тому +13

      And the ability to "ahh measure your circle to make sure you get the right size hole here."

    • @DIYToPen
      @DIYToPen 2 роки тому +37

      He followed the edge with his hand? It's not exactly difficult. And when he didn't the circle was way wobbly. Served the purpose though

  • @benjaminreinhardt259
    @benjaminreinhardt259 2 роки тому +105

    I built my burn barrel last fall. I built a dolly into mine. Scabbed an axle on to it from an old yard trailer and used some tubular steel remnant for the handle. I don't like a burn barrel laying out in my yard all the time. I researched building it more efficient to burn faster but didn't come up with much. I saw the smokeless fire pits but couldn't figure out how to build it into a burn barrel easily.
    Well done.

    • @Dr.JustIsWrong
      @Dr.JustIsWrong 2 роки тому +8

      Faster burn from drafting, chimney effect. Keep three holes vertically through the burning materials.
      I can barely feed mine fast enough.

    • @monicagrorud2225
      @monicagrorud2225 2 місяці тому

      Winner, winner chicken dinner. Bloody love your work. Champion.

  • @mikestover5894
    @mikestover5894 Рік тому +73

    I made this two days ago by following your instructions exactly. The only change I made was not using self tapping screws. I have a mig welder so I welded it back together. GREAT idea and GREAT video! Thank you!

    • @joshuawright6020
      @joshuawright6020 Рік тому +6

      Did you use a cutting torch instead of a grinder?

    • @iitkaks6
      @iitkaks6 Рік тому +8

      Please any one tell me whether this burn barrel can be made an incinerator by adding it with petrol and compressed air because I am working on a petrol incinerator. By the way my name is Anil Kumar Singh and I am working in Indian Institute Of Technology Kanpur, India.

    • @crackermcwhitey1364
      @crackermcwhitey1364 8 місяців тому

      @@joshuawright6020 Plasma or oxy acetylene would be a good choice even for the holes.

  • @TheSunnyGun
    @TheSunnyGun 5 місяців тому +16

    Honestly i didnt expect such a well explained and wholesome video from a burn barrel tutorial but you did a great job explaining all the steps! Got a new project for this weekend thank you!

  • @AlexDannenberg
    @AlexDannenberg Рік тому +209

    Built the burn barrel this week and it works like a charm. We made one modification which is obvious, but still may be worth mentioning: We found that the legs were very flimsy so we folded them inward and rested the barrel on cinderblocks that rest on their sides so that the cinder block cutouts allow air to flow freely from the outside to the underside of the (elevated) barrel.

    • @GEOsustainable
      @GEOsustainable Рік тому +14

      Then you did it wrong, now do it again. LOL. Good idea, thanks.

    • @iitkaks6
      @iitkaks6 Рік тому +7

      Please any one tell me whether this burn barrel can be made an incinerator by adding it with petrol and compressed air because I am working on a petrol incinerator. By the way my name is Anil Kumar Singh and I am working in Indian Institute Of Technology Kanpur, India.

    • @glorywr
      @glorywr 11 місяців тому +10

      because cinder blocks can sometimes have trapped moisture that can make them explode I would recommend fire bricks instead, but yeah brick feet seem like a good idea

    • @SimianLive
      @SimianLive 8 місяців тому

      @@iitkaks6 petrol incinerator is a bad idea, u want to use diesel not petrol. just look on youtube for waste oil burners.

  • @TheJorgSacul
    @TheJorgSacul 2 роки тому +250

    I did something similar (although much less complex) towards the end of burning being allowed in my city. Nobody knew I was burning anything, unless they saw the jet of flame shooting out of the top. Never made nearly as much smoke as a small charcoal grill, and to be honest, sometimes I'd throw some garlic and onion powder into the fire to drive the neighbors crazy, wondering who was cooking out :D

    • @DormantIdeasNIQ
      @DormantIdeasNIQ 2 роки тому +9

      yeah right! I smell a ... concocted concoction!

    • @roymadison5686
      @roymadison5686 2 роки тому +5

      Lol ...
      Love it

    • @JavierJrSuico
      @JavierJrSuico 2 роки тому +2

      @@roymadison5686 you can also burn hot pepper

    • @ronzek3207
      @ronzek3207 2 роки тому +7

      garlic and onions smell. LOL

    • @R4N21
      @R4N21 2 роки тому +1

      haha great stuff

  • @user-pp3xq1jt7s
    @user-pp3xq1jt7s 6 місяців тому +1

    I know this isn't the best way to get rid of mosquitoes, but I made me a smoker by putting a 5gal bucket inside another,with some air vents cut in the bottom,made a handle from a tree branch wedged inside the bucket handles so I could move it while working in my garden. It's a huge garden and I store my rainwater next to the garden in a few places,also there is a farmers canal flowing next to me so there are plenty of mosquitoes. I will throw some green weeds on top of the fire to produce the smoke to rid my work area of mosquitoes.One day I had so much smoke it looked like a dense fog was setting in and some passerby called the Fire Dept. When they showed up,put the lid on,they didn't know where it was coming from.Just a bit of humor. Nice video btw,very cool.

  • @brencostigan
    @brencostigan Рік тому +10

    Greetings from the U.K. we just made a burn barrel using your nicely detailed instructions. Works a treat, thanks for putting this video together and sharing it.

  • @robert4747
    @robert4747 2 роки тому +99

    What I enjoyed the most about your video, was hearing you tell you children Multiple times throughout the video you love them. And you can hear it out your voice. Your awesome.

  • @ourv9603
    @ourv9603 2 роки тому +24

    Some years ago we camped at an Rv park in the
    Santa Cruz mtns of Calif. For fire pits, this park
    had fabricated their fire pits out of the tub used
    in old washing machines. These tubs have holes
    punched into them top to bottom. The first thing
    I noticed after lighting my fire was, NO SMOKE!
    It worked SO well that I acquired an old washing
    machine tub, put 4 legs on it and we hauled around
    with us as we traveled. It was the BOMB!! Until
    after many many fires, the metal fatigued & the
    thing fell apart.
    !

    • @halfulford3081
      @halfulford3081 2 роки тому

      I bet it lasted a lot longer than the burn barrels

    • @PumpKing96
      @PumpKing96 2 роки тому

      These are very common here in Germany. At least in my village.

    • @Lawrence330
      @Lawrence330 2 роки тому +1

      I used an old dryer tub for a while. It had a ceramic coating on it that I *could not* remove for the life of me. Sure made welding the legs on tricky, but it kept it mostly rust free for years of use.

    • @brianlawliss1080
      @brianlawliss1080 2 роки тому

      I have used one of those, and they work very well!

    • @drizler
      @drizler 2 роки тому

      They use them as portable pits at events I’m told. Great idea

  • @carinrichardson
    @carinrichardson Рік тому +23

    I love this! I want to use a barrel to cook outdoors. In Mexico, they use this with a flat disc on top to use as a comal to make tortillas or a flat surface to put a pot on. I recently saw a video where she had also added a middle portion that she used as an oven complete with a door. She still had the top she could use to cook on while using the middle as an oven, brilliant!!!

    • @iitkaks6
      @iitkaks6 Рік тому +1

      Please any one tell me whether this burn barrel can be made an incinerator by adding it with petrol and compressed air because I am working on a petrol incinerator. By the way my name is Anil Kumar Singh and I am working in Indian Institute Of Technology Kanpur, India.

    • @Dmitro_KAVO
      @Dmitro_KAVO 11 місяців тому

      ​@@iitkaks6 Petrol? Why?)

    • @iitkaks6
      @iitkaks6 11 місяців тому

      @@Dmitro_KAVO Because petrol is a good and cheap means for combustion and i worked on it.

    • @SouthernGround
      @SouthernGround 7 місяців тому +3

      @@iitkaks6 Only fuel I use is a cup of diesel to get a fire going, the trash dose the rest, it's a burn barrel not a trash refinery burning medical waste.

  • @staceyweston9694
    @staceyweston9694 4 місяці тому +5

    Super impressed with the ingenuity that went into this conversion. Thanks for sharing!!!

  • @Hilde_von_Derp
    @Hilde_von_Derp 2 роки тому +64

    Freakin' brilliant. This is basically the exact way a jet turbine combustor works, secondary air injection for clean combustion, and it keeps the outside cooler for safety. Really solid work! Thanks.

    • @Thrive-Off-Grid
      @Thrive-Off-Grid 2 роки тому +7

      You should see my version it actual sounds like a jet engine haha. ua-cam.com/video/VzGpIGQiv-8/v-deo.html

    • @JamesJones-xh4hp
      @JamesJones-xh4hp 2 роки тому +7

      It's called a woodgas burner. In this case a barrel. The gases that don't burn the 1st time has oxygen reintroduced to cause a 2nd burn. . That's the reason normal burn barrels smoke. Lack of oxygen

    • @Lawrence330
      @Lawrence330 2 роки тому +1

      This is the same principle as AIR injection in late 70s and 80s engines. More efficient catalytic converters took over, and I'm not aware of any current production engines utilizing the tech. The diesel particle filters function more like an afterburner by comparison.

    • @JamesJones-xh4hp
      @JamesJones-xh4hp 2 роки тому +1

      @@Lawrence330 I took the dpf as a catalytic converter for diesels lol I think u might mean the egr. I get what you're saying tho.

    • @HotelPapa100
      @HotelPapa100 2 роки тому

      I looked at that project and thought: "a few of those would make one FREAKISHLY large jet engine..."

  • @tedwarne8236
    @tedwarne8236 2 роки тому +572

    I noticed you burned through a lot of cutting wheels. Diablo makes a diamond tipped cutting wheel that lasts a really long time. I skirt mobile homes and used to used about 5-8 discs per hone. I’m on the same Diablo wheel for my 4th home.

    • @IsaKocoglu
      @IsaKocoglu 2 роки тому +29

      Thank you very much for the great tip
      😉👍👍

    • @superspecialty5169
      @superspecialty5169 2 роки тому +8

      So, what was the rpm of your grinder?

    • @johndough9187
      @johndough9187 2 роки тому +14

      There's an exciting new way to cut metal. A saw.

    • @superspecialty5169
      @superspecialty5169 2 роки тому +25

      @@johndough9187 if I’m within a 120v-20a outlet I will be using my plasma arch torch cutter! Hey, I wonder do they have cordless ones 🤔🙀?

    • @majorpayne4098
      @majorpayne4098 2 роки тому +13

      diablo blades are awesome

  • @bogartthepitbull6268
    @bogartthepitbull6268 Рік тому +2

    Seeing your Kids interact with you at the tail end of the video shows how healthy the environment these Kids are growing into and will become an ideal member of our society.

  • @user-jf2gw6ly6h
    @user-jf2gw6ly6h 3 місяці тому +3

    Ive put together my parts and tools… looking forward to putting this together this weekend! Thank you for the great video!

  • @SchaelTeer
    @SchaelTeer 2 роки тому +8

    "We're building a burning barrel, not a clock" - will be my favourite quote from now on!

  • @iwantcheesypuffs
    @iwantcheesypuffs 2 роки тому +145

    I really liked how you showed you can build something practical, and useful, without a fancy workbench or fancy tools. Though the step bit was pretty key to this project, and you referenced it perfectly in the video.
    "We all have something to gain by inspiring each other" -- this should be the tagline for UA-cam. I would bet on the ideas and success of 10,000 "backyard engineers" vs 50 highly paid engineers.

    • @Lawrence330
      @Lawrence330 2 роки тому +18

      Backyard engineering is the best (IMO) driver for engineering talent. People who become engineers only because they were told they ought to because they were good at math or for the salaries don't often make good problem solvers. Again, IMO, YMMV.

    • @dustyking8851
      @dustyking8851 2 роки тому +1

      That's what I was thinking. How many engineers would it take to create this cleaner burning barrel and how long? 😃 By the time he was on the bottom of the barrel I stopped, he'll have already come up w/ a new one.

    • @GetRhythm2011
      @GetRhythm2011 2 роки тому +1

      @@Lawrence330 Necessity [and curiosity] is the Mother of All Inventions. ;)

  • @Ri25tch
    @Ri25tch 3 місяці тому +2

    Awesome awesome awesome teaching!!! Please don't ever stop passing on the knowledge! It's the only way we live and grow👍

  • @pathfinder2reality
    @pathfinder2reality 7 місяців тому +3

    I made a burn barrel according to your instructions and the barrel is SUPER EFFICIENT!!!
    Thanks for the video!!!

  • @edgardomagana5809
    @edgardomagana5809 Рік тому +11

    My favorite part of the video was , you having fun with your children. Thanks for giving this world a better chance with great kids.

  • @texputter7928
    @texputter7928 2 роки тому +98

    Can't believe i just sat here and watched this entire video and loved it! I don't even need one of those, but I want to go out and build one. Great job.

    • @kenh9508
      @kenh9508 2 роки тому +4

      Except for the last piece when he was working on the ground using the jigsaw. That part would have screwed up my back for a month! But same here, I felt like making one without the need for one.

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT 2 роки тому +1

      @@kenh9508 Honestly, this seems very over-engineered. There are quite a few ways to make it much simpler and not much worse if not just as efficient. For example, you could do away with the inner barrel, on the bottom make those fins on which you rest the grate in your video, then drill a row of holes near the top like you did to the inside barrel, then use a crowbar or some long metal pipe to bend the metal to guide the air inside the barrel. Or instead of the holes near the top, you could cut fins like those which hold the crate, but have less space between them, and have them cut to have the uncut part alternate from towards the top of the barrel and towards the bottom of the barrel, then angle them to guide the outside air inside (bend outwards those connected from the top like an A shape, and bend inwards those connected from the bottom like a V shape), to allow the air to mix with the hot gases, for an efficient second burn.

    • @andyb7963
      @andyb7963 2 роки тому +8

      @@SapioiT the whole point of the inner barrel is to route air to the rim for secondary burning, this is why it's smokeless, if you omit the inner barrel it won't work

    • @darrenadams1555
      @darrenadams1555 2 роки тому +1

      I even picked up an American accent watching it 😁hot diggity dog great clip

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT Рік тому +1

      @@andyb7963 Actually, it doesn't matter that much if the air comes from the bottom of the barrel, or from the sides of the barrel. If you have inwards-pointing holes, ideally slightly angled clockwise or coutnerclockwise, then you would still route air to the rim for the secondary burning. The funnel part is meant to help mix the air and increase the pressure (which, in term, increases the temperature), for the secondary burning to take place. You could use a longer funnel, if you think hose angled air intake holes (which have to be angled upwards towards the inside of the barrel), to make it more likely for the secondary burn to happen. Do look up how a "vortex stove" works, or how a "vortex rocket stove" works (which can be made from a barrel, too).

  • @rustyevolution6298
    @rustyevolution6298 7 місяців тому +3

    Pro tip: Before you cut the bottom out of the second barrel you can draw all your lines, drill your holes and make your "propellor" cuts, and THEN cut the bottom out. It will be easier than cutting it out after. Also, consider adding a grate in the bottom of the finished burn barrel to better support the wieght of the burn material and not just relying on the thin metal of the "propellor." This will have the added benifit of prolonging the propellors lifespan and avoiding burn through.
    Congratulations on an excellent presentation by the way!

    • @joutoob9
      @joutoob9 6 місяців тому

      yes, that thin cut up bottom int he video is not going to support much after a couple burns and a rain.

  • @littlejln213
    @littlejln213 6 місяців тому +2

    I was burning this last weekend, yard waste and there was a ton of soil mixed in. I dumped the ash out and low and behold I had a huge clump of glass. I do use a blower fan for a inflatable bouncy house as an incinerator. But I had no idea that it would get so hot. Wow. 3000 degrees. I use to use a leaf blower until my neighbor gave me the inflator. Just drilled some holes in the bottom around the entire thing then cut a triangle shape large hole, place the blower about 2 feet back. And voila 3000 degrees. Burns everything from soaking wet leaves and grass clippings to green branches. It's crazy and there is no smoke if you get it going hot enough. Which is super easy.

  • @shdwbnndbyyt
    @shdwbnndbyyt 2 роки тому +37

    "Don't drill in your hand" -- Man, you take all the fun out of this!!!

    • @michaelripperger5674
      @michaelripperger5674 2 роки тому +1

      Been there … done that

    • @GetRhythm2011
      @GetRhythm2011 2 роки тому +1

      LOL! I helped my brother detach his hand from a roofing job. Doggone that had to hurt. Oy.

    • @cariwensley1736
      @cariwensley1736 2 роки тому

      😆😆😆😆😆

  • @deblaunk
    @deblaunk 2 роки тому +190

    My mom and I made followed this tutorial and it worked out great! Got an acre lot and was able to get all the yard debris burned up 100x faster than normal with no smoke!

    • @wg8304
      @wg8304 2 роки тому +4

      How long did it take to complete the burn barrel?

    • @infiniteadam7352
      @infiniteadam7352 2 роки тому +13

      Awesome man, now take the ash, put it a 5 gallon bucket with non chlorinated water, add leaf mold and a tablespoon of seasalt, give it between 15 day to a year or more, then use a 10 to one delusion for potassium fertilizer. Thats a Jadam, Korean natural farming method I learned. To make plant specific fertilizers change the ash part of that recipe to chopped grass and cuttings from the plant you intend to fertilize. Personally I couldn't find leaf mold in my woods, so I use my Homemade compost.

    • @bryanbailey1476
      @bryanbailey1476 2 роки тому

      @@infiniteadam7352 good information thanks from England UK

    • @time2cclear
      @time2cclear 2 роки тому +2

      @@infiniteadam7352 you lost me after 5 gallon bucket . would it be useful to just throw the ashes in my garden ?

    • @priestesslucy3299
      @priestesslucy3299 2 роки тому +6

      @@time2cclear in moderation.
      A little bit can be useful, a little bit more if your soil is acidic.
      Too concentrated will kill your plants

  • @judyanderson3500
    @judyanderson3500 4 місяці тому +2

    It is a great ideal and clear direction for a burn barrel. Your step-by-step is a skilled presentation. Thanks for sharing .

  • @nhansen197
    @nhansen197 Рік тому +2

    I made myself a brick burn barrel. I was tiered of replacing burn barrels every time they rusted out. All I did was stack the bricks in a cylindrical shape overlapping every other layer. My construction isn't as efficient your creation, but it's better than just a barrel because of all the air flow. The best part is that not only will it not rust out, it looks good. One of these days I might actually mortar the bricks, though if I do I'll need to make sure I don't loose all that airflow.

    • @thomasolson7447
      @thomasolson7447 Рік тому +1

      I was thinking about that. 600 degrees celsius is all it takes. I'm pretty sure the barrel goes way beyond that. If you go with bricks, you'll need to keep it dry. I would try clay myself, if I required a place to burn garbage Primitive Technology has a video on making a bunch of it at once. I wonder if I can make something that can be convert to a kiln, on occasion.

    • @nhansen197
      @nhansen197 Рік тому

      @@thomasolson7447 You'd need kiln bricks to do it. A kiln stays hot for a long time and that requires a better quality brick than what's typically available at the local hardware store. As for keeping it dry, not really big issue. I've thought about making the modifications that would allow me to use my barrel as a BBQ. Non gas.

  • @markg3305
    @markg3305 Рік тому +98

    I spend countless hours watching how to videos on any random cool things to build next... you by far have one of the best ways to show step by step

  • @terkfranks1538
    @terkfranks1538 2 роки тому +55

    That's awesome. I would suggest saving the end off the first barrel (and leaving an inch or two side to it) and then use that as a top of lid for when not in use and it will keep the rain/snow out. 👍

  • @richardmartin4608
    @richardmartin4608 Рік тому +1

    For forty years I've been fabricating things out of steel/metal. I'm constantly looking for ways to improve/educate myself. This is a great video on explaining the obvious then taking the time to educate others (like me). At the start I'm watching thinking why has he started to cut in the centre of the barrel, then he gets the strap. Now what, I'm thinking, and as soon as we see him wrapping it around the barrel it's plainly obvious. Too obvious, it's to stop the steel spring and the 1" notch in the rim obvious but so simple to most it's not. Great video. Thank you for taking the time.

  • @razorworks9942
    @razorworks9942 Рік тому +66

    Just ran across your channel and as a welder/fabricator for over 4 decades, although I am a bit of a perfectionist, I am impressed with what you've shared..I been wanting to put together a "burn barrel" and you've inspired me to finally put one together.
    I will be trying a few different ideas and we'll see how mine turns out in comparison to yours..
    Thumbs up, thanks for sharing and showing your cute kids..
    Be well!
    Razor!

    • @Aminorsnickle
      @Aminorsnickle Рік тому +5

      Update?

    • @stevie.dx1710
      @stevie.dx1710 Рік тому

      Ditto.

    • @whitechris720
      @whitechris720 Рік тому

      Any progress?

    • @jerrysolonsmith8471
      @jerrysolonsmith8471 Рік тому +1

      Well? Are you ready to fab me one? I'll PayPal you, lol

    • @razorworks9942
      @razorworks9942 Рік тому +2

      @@jerrysolonsmith8471
      Thanks for the offer Jerry...
      But I haven't had time to make one for myself, so I went out a bought one...😳

  • @conservativetaxpayer3784
    @conservativetaxpayer3784 2 роки тому +66

    Built one this afternoon. Overall works great. First tip is buy the hole saw with carbide teeth at Harbor Freight. It's $20 and lot faster than the cone bit. Use high temp paint on all cut surfaces, but I am in Florida where everything rusts. Thanks for the design.

    • @jkforzi
      @jkforzi 2 роки тому +3

      Wish I read this comment a couple days ago. I’m building this right now and this project is the first and last time I use a step bit (when possible)

    • @wg8304
      @wg8304 2 роки тому

      @@jkforzi never used one but you think the hole saw is the way to go?

    • @trebledog
      @trebledog 2 роки тому +4

      A good quality step bit is what worked for me. There is a steep learning curve, but after a half doz holes, you leardcthe correct pressure to drill thru and when to let up. After that I was drilling 6-8 holes a minute, and that was slow. But you have to put the time in to learn what pressure is the magic point.

    • @kdkdmmdlado312
      @kdkdmmdlado312 2 роки тому

      @@trebledog of n

    • @stevescuba1978
      @stevescuba1978 2 роки тому +6

      @@wg8304 carbide tipped hole saws (look near electrical tools, they're used to cut into electrical panels and boxes) will nearly cut, but use heavy, steady pressure and a little lube, like used motor oil. This carbide teeth are brittle, so they'll stay sharp for a long time, but will break easily if they chatter or get hung up

  • @MrClarkisgod
    @MrClarkisgod 2 роки тому +27

    Hey buddy, great video. But PLEASE put the blade guard back on your grinder. I have 11 stitches in my chest and I'm pretty sure I'm going to lose this finger because I had a cut off wheel pop on me doing stuff I have done 1,000 times before.

    • @Corieorieorie
      @Corieorieorie 3 місяці тому +1

      Just had to get that off your "chest" yeah ... 👀🤣

  • @jaystachowiak3540
    @jaystachowiak3540 Рік тому +2

    My man, I LOVE the video, and the design! Your instructions are clear. This video is 90% perfect. The only thing that you absolutely have to change is the way you use that razor wheel! Put a guard on that grinder, and stop pulling towards yourself! Also, buy and use a face shield. You are milliseconds away from a life altering accident, and it is very avoidable. I have seen it twice now, and it's not pretty! I can't tell enough people that out of all the dangerous tools we use, this is the one that WANTS to kill us, and we need to respect it!

  • @martyroof9022
    @martyroof9022 Рік тому +13

    Thank You for sharing your burn barrel design. It's different from all of the boring burn barrel videos that just drill several holes in one barrel. You take it to a higher level.
    I built a burn barrel exactly to your video instructions, and I love how well it works. Not only is it smokeless, it burns materials faster and it doesn't have to be touched once it starts burning! I love it.
    Thanks again for sharing your creativity and ingenuity with the rest of us UA-cam surfers!👍

    • @iitkaks6
      @iitkaks6 Рік тому

      Please any one tell me whether this burn barrel can be made an incinerator by adding it with petrol and compressed air because I am working on a petrol incinerator. By the way my name is Anil Kumar Singh and I am working in Indian Institute Of Technology Kanpur, India.

    • @mikeconnery4652
      @mikeconnery4652 6 місяців тому

      ​@@iitkaks6 I think that the barrel metal would be too thin for what you want to do. However, industrial compressor tanks could work, just find the people that install and work on compressors. 😊

  • @bluecobra6294
    @bluecobra6294 2 роки тому +65

    Well if there was an award for the best presentation and innovation, you won it!
    I recently had a go at building one and failed miserably.
    Your video not only inspired me to build your version but you also sold a dewalt jigsaw. So Thankyou for sharing your talent and skill. I live in London and the locals get kind of hissy when it comes to smoke. Many thanks

    • @samuelfellows6923
      @samuelfellows6923 2 роки тому

      😀🇬🇧

    • @AlexsaurusRex
      @AlexsaurusRex 2 роки тому +1

      I was reading this in a American mid-west accent until you mentioned you’re in London, then I switched to the overseas English. 🤣

    • @charlesroberts3910
      @charlesroberts3910 2 роки тому +1

      We can't legally burn wher I live but maybe I can pass it off as a homemade bb que cooker

  • @HardwayRanch
    @HardwayRanch 2 роки тому +165

    I just finished mine this afternoon and tested it with cardboard - simply amazing! Thanks a bunch for sharing this project.

    • @dubmob151
      @dubmob151 2 роки тому +7

      For a second I thought you made it out of cardboard to test it out 🙃.
      If there's a commercial version of this I'd like that, I think making this would need more patience than I'm capable of, so that's probably why I'd be inclined to make one out of cardboard 😀

    • @SweetMooch
      @SweetMooch Рік тому +2

      Just a tip. Burning just cardboard won't fully achieve what this is for. For it to work properly you need the inside barrel wall to get extremely hot. That's what causes the secondary combustion. Small smokeless fire pits take about 15 minutes of adequate fire to reach "smokeless" so a barrel this size probably takes about 30 minutes.

    • @HardwayRanch
      @HardwayRanch Рік тому +3

      @@SweetMooch Trust me on this - when I burned cardboard it blistered the paint off the barrel in just a few minutes! Only trouble I have with burning cardboard is the ash is clogging up the air coming in the bottom. So I only burn one or two loads at a time, then let it cool and clear away the ash.

    • @kimkleiner8456
      @kimkleiner8456 Рік тому

      @@SweetMooch I used to live in a cabin that had a device called " blazing shower" for it's sole source of domestic hot water. It was simply a length of half inch copper tube lining the inside of stovepipe. It was hooked up to a pacariously mounted tank in the loft. It was pretty worthless but might have been the stove which was a Ben Franklin. You could burn a hot fire all night and still have a mediocre shower the next morning. I didn't install it but it looked right for the thermosyphon to work but it just didn't. The only thing it did is prevent the headache you could get from the freezing cold water in winter. I have seen old cook stoves that heated water and they had steel pipes right in the firebox where they were exposed to direct flame. Since the pipes were in the stove pipe the only way to get a shower warm enough to wash your hair was to have a partner feeding that wood stove with bone dry finely split hard wood. Or you could burn waxed cardboard cut into 3" strips and folded in to a triangle shaped tube. You could get a decent shower out of a couple banana boxes as long as you had an assistant keeping that fire fed so the Flames were going way up the stove pipe.(does anyone know why my Samsung won't let me write certain words without capitals?) Anyways, cardboard is capable of burning pretty hot but it needs lots of air. Maybe you're overstuffing or your cardboard is moist?

    • @katsheetz
      @katsheetz Рік тому

      Think I'll just punch holes as before set on elevated cinder blocks.

  • @chaorazul_4477
    @chaorazul_4477 2 дні тому +1

    "wear glases, be safe!" he says while proceeding to use an angle grinder without the guard xD

  • @TheRoadfarmer
    @TheRoadfarmer Рік тому +9

    I put a hole about 8" off the bottom of my barrel. About 2.5-3" in diameter. Just big enough to slide a piece of steel pipe in that also fits neatly around the tube of my leaf blower. I put a loose piece of steel plate on top of the barrel that I can adjust. With the leaf blower just a bit above idle it will burn all of our household refuse and baby diapers, with zero smoke once it starts to get hot. I adjust the plate steel on top to leave about a 10-15% open slot. At night the sides will glow bright red because it gets so hot. Sounds a bit like a rocket when it gets going. Like I said it will burn all of our household refuse and diapers with zero smoke and leaves a very small amount of ash afterwards.

    • @8barbies779
      @8barbies779 2 місяці тому +1

      RoadFarmer - man i hope you're still on this one. i love this idea. can i ask a quick question? did you do this to just a normal barrel or did you build this type & then add the leaf blower adapter? you said it's pretty smokeless but is that cuz its this type WITH the blower or can i just add your mod to a normal barrel? i'm an outfitter in alaska & we have a small incinerator but i'd like something a little more mobile. thanks heaps in advance:)

  • @NickFrom1228
    @NickFrom1228 2 роки тому +110

    One enhancement I would make is use the top 3 inches or so of another barrel as an ash trap under the barrel. Often when burning stuff there are nails and whatnot so having it all contained in a pan helps clean those up and it also gives you an instant container to haul the ashes away.

    • @rafaelallenblock
      @rafaelallenblock Рік тому +9

      You don't need another barrel: Just cut 3" off one of the barrels before starting. The completed barrel winds up 3" shorter overall but you save material. The 3" ring off the second barrel might be useful too.

    • @NickFrom1228
      @NickFrom1228 Рік тому +2

      @@rafaelallenblock True. I guess it depends on how many barrels a person has laying around and how they want to go about it. I like the one barrel idea. More efficient use of resources.

    • @jameshoffman1842
      @jameshoffman1842 Рік тому

      On this addition I completely agree and it keep the ashes contained and easy to clean up after the burn…👍🔥🇺🇸

    • @iitkaks6
      @iitkaks6 Рік тому

      Please any one tell me whether this burn barrel can be made an incinerator by adding it with petrol and compressed air because I am working on a petrol incinerator. By the way my name is Anil Kumar Singh and I am working in Indian Institute Of Technology Kanpur, India.

    • @alexrahardjazh
      @alexrahardjazh 11 місяців тому

      Why not just create rocket stove

  • @justinbrady412
    @justinbrady412 Рік тому

    The boy and I built one last weekend. Very nice plan, and thanks for the details. We welded the joint on the inner barrel and also welded flat pads on the feet to make it more stable on dirt/gravel. I didn't have a unibit, so we fiddled around with a hole saw for much of the holes. Got to thinking it would be cool to write something in the lower area of the outer barrel, especially if a plasma cutter is available. It was a gift for the grandparents, so haven't seen it burn, but I'm sure it'll do great. Very nice video! Blessings to you and your beautiful kids.

  • @steeledickmann1672
    @steeledickmann1672 Рік тому +14

    My buddy did a similar burn barrel. He used a 55 gallon and a 30 gallon barrel. Pretty much same out come. The idea stemmed from a wood gasification stove but much bigger so he could burn some rotting wood from his yard. So he adapted a squirrel cage fan to it, which made it a blast furnace.

  • @StarScapesOG
    @StarScapesOG 2 роки тому +144

    "We're building a burn barrel, not a clock."
    My OCD doesn't care.
    Wonderful video! Getting some Grant Thompson vibes (may he rest in peace) which is a good thing!

    • @thomasarussellsr
      @thomasarussellsr 2 роки тому +5

      OCD is great in finish carpentry, but in backyard engineering it tends to slow progress. Trust me, I know from experience. I suffer from the perfectionism gene myself.

    • @rollingsteady3107
      @rollingsteady3107 2 роки тому +3

      @@thomasarussellsr OCD doesn't care! LOL

    • @thomasarussellsr
      @thomasarussellsr 2 роки тому +6

      @@rollingsteady3107 oh, I get it... I could spend a week building a burn barrel. The holes must be evenly spaced so that the fire-nado spins just perfectly.

  • @darrellturner560
    @darrellturner560 2 роки тому +15

    This is great. I live in a country with no refuse collection where almost everyone burns (I should say smoulders) their rubbish. I'll be adding one to my yard and discussing a more robust build with a thermal blanket filled twin layered outer shell to increase the internal heat with our local government for public use. Hopefully reduce some of the localised pollution.
    Thank you awesome stuff! Plus from what we see here a man with a heart of pure joy.

    • @rowanshole
      @rowanshole 2 роки тому +4

      The addition of the thermal blanket will stop the air rising between the two barrels and exiting at the top- thus stopping the secondary burn. Your burn barrel will then smoke.

    • @Jakeplayz659
      @Jakeplayz659 2 роки тому +2

      Curious, what country do you live in without garbage collection?

    • @darrellturner560
      @darrellturner560 2 роки тому +6

      @@rowanshole why not read my comment again then apologise. It reads 'a thermal blanket filled twin layered outer shell'. The void between the inner and outer is not obstructed.
      Reducing the heat loss from the outer shell will in fact increase the draw in the void. As well as keep the whole thing much safer. You could use thermal refactoried bricks as the outer shell but that would require a master tradesman in masonary as myself to construct and be very costly. 😁 Having one welded up out of mild steel plate is much cheaper
      Comprehen what you read before replying is good advise.

    • @darrellturner560
      @darrellturner560 2 роки тому +3

      @@Jakeplayz659I live in the rice fields of a province in a south east Asian country. No such thing as public sanitation infrustructure around here.

    • @rowanshole
      @rowanshole 2 роки тому +2

      @@darrellturner560 hope this makes you feel better- sorry.

  • @randallbarrick1192
    @randallbarrick1192 Рік тому +1

    Just subscribed to the channel. Great idea for the burn barrel. My system is to hole saw a 4 1/2" hole in the lower side of the barrel. Then, I install a 5' joint of 4" galvanized vent pipe into the hole, the other end attached to an old 100 CFM bath vent fan. Once the fire is started, I plug in the fan. The thing sounds like a jet engine, and burns most any combustible material I throw in. The most important thing, of course, is to get plenty of air in. The system shown in the video accomplishes this very efficiently, without any mechanical aid.

  • @MichaelDillin
    @MichaelDillin 7 місяців тому +2

    Grade instructions simple-to-follow I love the way you did it thank you thank

  • @FD-ms2nm
    @FD-ms2nm 2 роки тому +8

    I made one my own way.. still lasting in a wet environment. One barrel, made a stand for it to keep it off the ground so the bottom doesn’t rot out. Next I made 3 sets of 2 cut outs 3”x1” along the bottom. After that I made a grating to keep the bottom clean and allow air flow to the fire. Set that at about 3” off the bottom of the barrel. Made that grating removable for easy cleaning. The bottom of my barrel is not open like yours so I don’t have a mess on the floor. I just dump the ashes in a hole when it comes time to do so. Last about 7 or 8 years in NY state.

  • @Eric-gi9kg
    @Eric-gi9kg 2 роки тому +21

    I've watched dozens, if not hundreds of How To videos...and Your instruction is Hands Down THE BEST I have Ever seen or heard.
    The simplicity of instruction, and narration is Spot On.
    Outstanding Job

  • @DPaquette
    @DPaquette 23 дні тому

    Having the kids get involved at the end makes this video priceless. Good Stuff.

  • @Oddysey182
    @Oddysey182 Рік тому +1

    Thanks dude. Just finished my inner drum... will complete outer drum and grill tomorrow.... !
    Thankyou very much. I didn't realise I needed 1 until I saw your video. Fun to make, practically free just time. Awesome.

  • @frankmmiii
    @frankmmiii 2 роки тому +4

    I just bought a metal trashcan for this purpose. Making a burn barrel to burn larger items such as branches and some non-recyclable cardboard(food contaminated). But this video will definitely help me build it to make it burn cleaner and more efficiently. Thank You.

  • @Urugami45
    @Urugami45 2 роки тому +155

    I've done the same thing on a small scale with tin cans, with my son 'helping'. Then we'd have fun burning sticks and pine cones in them, watching the jets burn the smoke. Very nice job upsizing this to a piece of useful gear.

    • @ericschulze5641
      @ericschulze5641 2 роки тому +5

      I built one similar it's like a jet engine dangerous heat invisible flames be very careful using one of these

    • @tuloko16
      @tuloko16 2 роки тому +11

      I wonder if this thing “roars” like the wood gas/ hobo stove you build with the paint can.
      Im going to build one of these, but i want to experiment with less holes at the top to see if i can get the “swirly flames” effect”. That would keep drunk people around the fire entertained.

    • @ericschulze5641
      @ericschulze5641 2 роки тому +10

      @@tuloko16 you don't want drunk people around one of these! it's not someone might get hurt someone WILL get hurt ,BADLY. It will burn branches as fast as you can put them in there once it's going

    • @andrebartels1690
      @andrebartels1690 2 роки тому +9

      I did this tin can thing too. You can get swirling flames by poking a screwdriver in the secondary air holes and jerking it sideways, all in the same direction, making rudimentary air scoops. This mixes the fuel and air more and causes an even cleaner combustion. And it looks cool 😉

    • @Supernaught00
      @Supernaught00 2 роки тому +4

      @@andrebartels1690 how long will the tin cans last? Can you use them for smaller burns?

  • @perolegabrielsen2751
    @perolegabrielsen2751 Місяць тому

    Hi! Thanks for your video. I live in Norway and built the same after your instructions. Just added a fine mesh "chicken-mesh" on top of the "fan" in the bottom to prevent big chunks of coal to fall out. Burns really good and with a minimum of smoke.

  • @guillermorosario4578
    @guillermorosario4578 11 місяців тому +1

    Adorable kids! Novel idea… 👍

  • @shangosankofa9560
    @shangosankofa9560 2 роки тому +21

    “We all have something to gain by inspiring each other”. I promise you, I was just saying something to that effect. We should help each other instead of hating on one another.

  • @deejaycomic
    @deejaycomic 2 роки тому +85

    I'm already imagining a scaled-down version for my little garden. Yard waste collection stopped in our area so I tried to discreetly burn the little bit I had, but a couple handfuls of magnolia leaves on my firepit makes it look like I'm trying to send smoke signals! Thanks for sharing your design!

    • @TruckTaxiMoveIt
      @TruckTaxiMoveIt 2 роки тому +15

      Did they offer you a discount on your taxes for the decrease in services?
      .... neither did my city

    • @fallingleaveskungfu
      @fallingleaveskungfu 2 роки тому +11

      Why not compost it? 🤷‍♂️

    • @heybulldog137
      @heybulldog137 2 роки тому +6

      Like a metal gallon paint can...

    • @deejaycomic
      @deejaycomic 2 роки тому +5

      @@fallingleaveskungfu It's down to space versus quantity of leaves really. My "lawn" is 20'x40' with a small magnolia. Mulching too many of the leaves only adds to the thatch that I rake out twice a year. A compost can would be full in a week and take a while to do its thing. Even if I could compost it all, I wouldn't have anywhere to put it except maybe the park behind my house.

    • @Dr.JustIsWrong
      @Dr.JustIsWrong 2 роки тому +3

      Half a 30 gal barrel and a steel 5 gallon inner.. js

  • @apiary1
    @apiary1 Рік тому

    I've been working on a smokeless burn barrel video, but have only found firepits. This is a godsend! Thank you! Same principles, just bigger.

  • @maverick5294
    @maverick5294 Рік тому +1

    What an absolute amazing tutorial. This is the best one I've watched and will complete, Thankyou.
    Please make more. 🙏 God bless 🙌

  • @izmirtolga2625
    @izmirtolga2625 2 роки тому +4

    Primary ability of this gentleman is to be an ideal family person. Rest will follow. More and more happy days with your family sir!

  • @sonnietim
    @sonnietim 2 роки тому +61

    What I like about this video so much is the video work and the combined commentary were really well edited to make it simple to follow, not long drawn out pieces for real time footage. It condensed a length process into something practical and safe with plain common sense regards safety etc.(Loved the comment about making a burn barrel and not a clock) And how he got George Clooney to do the voice over is a testament to the guys persuasiveness . Well done. Yeah it was inspiring to watch and to learn. 100/100. Looking forward to more instruction... I'm lovin' it. SOnnie T.

  • @TheG36387
    @TheG36387 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for the video. It worked just as you described. I'm building out a homestead and have watched a lot of "instructional" videos. Yours is the first where the process and result match the video frame by frame.

  • @Johny40Se7en
    @Johny40Se7en 7 місяців тому

    That's a bloody wicked build. Fair play and thanks for sharing fella. Very therapeutic to watch it all coming together 👍

  • @AnonymousAlcoholic772
    @AnonymousAlcoholic772 Рік тому +3

    Ok well I tried it. It works like crazy. Best part is the secondary burning starts right away, and you can see it. Along the top holes on the inside of the barrel, once you really got that sucker going, it looks like you have propane coming out of the air holes. Weirdest effect. I also attached a small 4 inch aluminum pipe at a right angle to the outer barrel and had a leaf blower at the other end to force air in. Although it made the fire look like i was trying to be visible from space, it was unnecessary. A large tree, minus the main trunk, was reduced to a bucket of ashes in a day. Two thumbs up!

    • @silverbackag9790
      @silverbackag9790 7 місяців тому

      I’m going to make this with a leaf blower as well. Pull out the grate, set on a stump, and burn the stump out.

  • @eternalfizzer
    @eternalfizzer Рік тому +33

    "We're building a burn barrel, not a clock." That needs a t-shirt. Or a frame in my shop. :-)
    What a well-designed improvement on a common yard item! Thanks for showing a way to make a difference.

  • @leonmyth5313
    @leonmyth5313 6 місяців тому +3

    Loved every moment! Inspired and motivated to build this with my son. Thanks for putting in the hard work and making this video

  • @tmw8127
    @tmw8127 7 місяців тому +2

    This is by far the best video I've ever seen on UA-cam. Thank you for this.

  • @HAXMAN
    @HAXMAN 2 роки тому +77

    Awesome idea! I knew that a taller fire pit worked better than a shallow one for the smokeless design but I never even thought about a burn barrel. Brilliant 👊

    • @someotherdude
      @someotherdude 2 роки тому

      But I think a very shallow wide one is much, much more entertaining. People like to stare down at an actual fire and they need to see the person sitting across from them. They won't hang out for a beer if they are staring at the side of a barrel. So there's still research and development to do here! Let's get to work!

    • @ryanaaron5889
      @ryanaaron5889 2 роки тому

      Would this design still work as well if the barrel was cut in half?

    • @richardduggar4665
      @richardduggar4665 Рік тому

      I would like to see if it would work on two thirds tall

  • @hermanboyd3367
    @hermanboyd3367 Рік тому +18

    I have made four of these for the family. On one burn barrel I used a lid for a bottom and raised the barrel so I would not have to drill all those holes on the outside barrel. Plus seven fire pits same basic method. They all work great.Thanks you are amazing.

  • @jameslewan7026
    @jameslewan7026 Рік тому +1

    Most definitely Inspiring, informative and motivational! More people need to be similarly helpful, our world would be immensely better! THANKS!

  • @paullawrence3238
    @paullawrence3238 4 місяці тому

    You sir taught us how to build an item most of us didn't know of yet try to accomplish ourselves....but the message at your conclusion was an unexpected gem....god bless you n your family for the informative step by step instruction for a cleaner and efficient product that is two fold.....burns up all sorts of trash and avoid almost all immitted pollution into our air .... genius and impressive.....thank you sir.

  • @thinkingimpaired5663
    @thinkingimpaired5663 2 роки тому +3

    Best part is with your son with a big smile looking at the camera at the end of the video. I'll have to give this project a try. I have the technology and a couple of barrels.

  • @mrfrankbosh
    @mrfrankbosh Рік тому +5

    Thank you for posting, very charitable. Please continue to post. Learning from others saves us all money and time.

  • @javiermontero4051
    @javiermontero4051 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for a clear and concise demonstration. I loved it.

  • @philipaudsley9335
    @philipaudsley9335 Рік тому +2

    We bought two barrels for €12 each. After failing to find cutting discs for metal in the local hardware stores 🤬 I cut all square holes with a jig saw. 1 day and 3 blades later, it’s done. First burn of dry branches went up like a blowtorch! Thank you for the inspiration, I am now deeply embedded in my wife’s good books 🥳

    • @rhamlet5290
      @rhamlet5290 Рік тому

      Metal cutting disks are very common. Just have to ask for it. If they sold out (surprisingly), even large stores like Auchan in the EU or Walmart in the US should carry them

  • @rodester1297
    @rodester1297 2 роки тому +76

    You could always do all the drilling and cutting of your grate while before cutting it out of the barrel to be at chest height rather than working on the ground

    • @peterdarr383
      @peterdarr383 2 роки тому +4

      And drill all those holes before making all the razor sharp teeth at the top.

    • @jameskelly9800
      @jameskelly9800 2 роки тому +2

      ..and not have to wrestle with it on the ground

    • @aaronfu2
      @aaronfu2 2 роки тому +6

      Real Craftsmen always use a gnarled partial 4 x 2 placed on loose rocky soil as a preferred workbench. Makes for easy clean-up. . .

    • @artsteadman2230
      @artsteadman2230 2 роки тому +2

      you must be vertically challenged if that barrel would be at 'chest height'

    • @artsteadman2230
      @artsteadman2230 2 роки тому +1

      @@aaronfu2 to each their own

  • @bretternde6510
    @bretternde6510 2 роки тому +39

    This is another reason why these platforms are important. This just awesome! Thank you for you and your families work putting your abilities out there, I’ll definitely be following ypur technique:(

  • @Quinta-Entre-Aguas
    @Quinta-Entre-Aguas Місяць тому

    Thank you for this video. I get a lot of "solo stove" advertising and now I can build my smokeless burn barrel myself.

  • @randyanderson6641
    @randyanderson6641 Рік тому +1

    Building one this weekend! Thanks for all the info, it helps all of us!

  • @PaulThomas-qo9vy
    @PaulThomas-qo9vy 2 роки тому +82

    Nicely designed, drawn & explained. I wondered when someone would scale up the smokeless fire pit principle to a 55 gal barrel size. The preheating of the air between the inner & outer walls contributes significantly to the smoke reduction as well as the excellent air drafting, swirling & multiple air mix points with the rising hot gasses/smoke. Well done & worth copying.

    • @1nvisible1
      @1nvisible1 2 роки тому +2

      *WARNING: This does not work with plastic rubbish bins.*

    • @woolval52
      @woolval52 2 роки тому +1

      @@1nvisible1 Haha!! Not even once?!

    • @coolmikefromcanada
      @coolmikefromcanada 2 роки тому +3

      @@woolval52 works for about half a fire

    • @Thrive-Off-Grid
      @Thrive-Off-Grid 2 роки тому +2

      Ive been doing this for years. Mine produces mass amounts of charcoal and is continuous fed. Note fire off the Pyrolysis gases much lower and heat the inside hopper much more efficient than this design. ua-cam.com/video/VzGpIGQiv-8/v-deo.html

    • @Thrive-Off-Grid
      @Thrive-Off-Grid 2 роки тому +3

      Just uploaded the tutorial. This is my kit but it can be DIY'ed use the vid and the one here to grasp the concepts and just build it. This is the same basic concept of what this guy is doing here but Im capping off the fuel hopper and igniting the pyrolysis gases lower to apply that heat to the fuel in the hopper. ua-cam.com/video/7p6Y4ezjRBI/v-deo.html

  • @alexm1465
    @alexm1465 2 роки тому +6

    Love the design on this burn barrel. I built one about a year ago which is about half the height using some old tractor wheels, same diameter as the 55 gal. drums. I have an ash collection pit underneath about 14 inches deep. Once everything gets proper air flow the whole pit glows bright red, in fact it gets so hot I have started using the pit as an impromptu blast furnace for casting (aluminum only), and forge for steel and iron. Keep in mind, I'm no expert, just a guy with a welder, and a lot of scrap metal to build with.

  • @rabaham
    @rabaham Рік тому

    You are a no nonsense type of a guy. Love your video. Thank you. I will definitely build one.

  • @lepikova
    @lepikova Місяць тому

    You are a great guy, thank you so much for sharing! Fantastic video, keep them coming.

  • @stephen12264
    @stephen12264 2 роки тому +14

    Your little gardener bringing you a carrot that is so cute. My daughter was by my side every gardening season from the time she was 2 until today. She is coming down to spend the weekend with me and her mom so we can plant this years garden. I absolutely loved your video I could watch a lot of videos like this one. Thank you for taking us along with you and God Bless your channel it's great to see good wholesome content on UA-cam.

  • @stevenrobertson4470
    @stevenrobertson4470 2 роки тому +26

    When I was a kid, everyone had what were called an "ash-can" which was a barrel in which people burned their trash. They were very smoky and hard to keep going, and the trash was never completely burned. Great improvement on the old ash-can design and a lot of fun! The amazing thing about this is that the space between walls has a much greater vertical length than the Solo Stove allowing longer exposure time for the air rising to be super heated, expand, and then come out the holes at the top hotter and at a higher velocity for a more efficient burn! The only improvement I could think of, would to create a system where the air coming in from underneath could also be heated before entry into the burn chamber as the Solo stove does by routing the air through a hole in the bottom which then comes around the ash pan! But you can't argue with success!

  • @VTPSTTU
    @VTPSTTU 3 місяці тому +1

    Thanks for the video. That was fun.
    The next step would be to build a roof over the improved burn barrel and channel the heat past a bank of water-filled tubes. Because you are burning the contents more completely, you should be getting more heat. If you could capture that heat and use the energy in some way, you'd have an even more useful system.
    One point that people should keep in mind is that you are still generating a great deal of CO2 and maybe some CO through this combustion. Even though there is no visible smoke, no one should put this kind of barrel in an enclosed space where the CO2 or CO could build up and asphyxiate people or animals. I don't know whether this would be safe to use to increase the CO2 inside a greenhouse and try to speed the growth of plants.

    • @rodschmidt8952
      @rodschmidt8952 Місяць тому +1

      For greenhouse use, you would need a CO detector and alarm, to monitor that

    • @VTPSTTU
      @VTPSTTU Місяць тому

      @@rodschmidt8952 I don't remember whether CO detectors are also detecting CO2. If the better combustion means very little CO generation, then a CO monitor might not detect reduced oxygen levels in the greenhouse from an overabundance of CO2. If one had an automatic watering system, maybe one could send that heat to the greenhouse and avoid entering the greenhouse more than once or twice a week. In that case, one could ventilate the greenhouse thoroughly, enter, do whatever work was necessary, close the ventilation, and then send the heat from the fire back into the greenhouse.
      I would still want a CO monitor even with those precautions. Instead of an alarm, I would probably be happy with a window setup so that I could look at CO levels without having to enter the greenhouse. We might even be reaching the point where one could have the CO sensors in the greenhouse but have the data sent by WiFi to a computer or phone outside the greenhouse.

  • @freedomofreligion3248
    @freedomofreligion3248 7 місяців тому +1

    I am a 71 yo single grandma, who is raising a 16 yo grandson (autistic, high functioning, he has a whole mom + a whole, mature dad, my son).
    I'm sitting here watching this video, fascinated. Going to build one.

  • @ZebbMassiv
    @ZebbMassiv 2 роки тому +7

    Nice. You could easily coil a bunch of copper tubing in between the two barrels for an excellent water heater

    • @TinekaJasonPalmer
      @TinekaJasonPalmer 2 роки тому

      Might restrict the air flow in the cavity for the preheated air that is used for the secondary combustion. Coil inside the burning chamber maybe a better option.

    • @teebob21
      @teebob21 2 роки тому +1

      @Garg710 An excellent idea for giving yourself steam burns in the inevitable explosion.

  • @Out-to-Pastor
    @Out-to-Pastor 2 роки тому +75

    Absolutely love this tutorial. Please do more like this for backyard projects.

  • @MikeyMack303
    @MikeyMack303 2 місяці тому

    Very nice, easy design! Thank you for sharing!

  • @robletsdoit5886
    @robletsdoit5886 Рік тому

    You’re the man!!!!I know it’s just a burn barrel,but dude that was AWESOME!!!!! Informative,practical,positive ,easy enough!!!!!! Great video!!!!!! Best video!!!

  • @mrfrankbosh
    @mrfrankbosh Рік тому +5

    Four legs are better than 3. Look at the leg and vent panels before cutting. Number 18 for me ended on the seam. Best to over lap inner drum seam with area not cut. Think about it you’ll get it. After I made it I thought having two 3/8 x 4” bolts sticking out of the outer barrel close to the top would help move it to the location and aid if it ever needs moving. When this incinerator is running the flame can reach 3-4 feet above the can if loaded. Even with only 1 foot of burning material the barrel generates a lot of swirling air flow which throws a lot of 1/2” ash into the air. The burn is very complete and I do not notice hot embers but lots of floating ash, not an issue in a farm or backyard away from the house by say 50 plus feet. This is a fun project and personally rewarding to complete and watch it work. I used a carbide Lenox 1” hole saw with a paint cap of used oil to dip and drill, no pilot hole needed and it goes very fast no preplanned spacing needed other than line 1:5 & 3” guides. 1/2” starter holes and a Jig saw with a Bosch metal blade went through everything like butter well maybe a bit harder. A harbor Frieght rolling magnet was a incredible at clean up making life easy. Everything is razor sharp so his advice and directions will save a cut, I made out injury free. It was mentioned on another video post. You do not want to do this with a flannel shirt, the guy had to throw his away. All the cut metal especially from the grinder will stick to flannel. I used a welding jacket but any smooth long sleeve cotton should do fine. Polyester can melt from grinding sparks. When screwing the legs a quick trigger bar clamp is awesome. Enjoy your project, very rewarding.

    • @warrenpeas
      @warrenpeas Рік тому

      very good points. do you know if you used the thinner type barrel? i know when i bought my barrewly i had the option of the thinner and thicker one. i got the thicker one and its been hell to cut with jig saw and step bit and bending the tabs inward for the inneer barrel by hand was not possible. i went thru 3 metal cut off wheels.

    • @mrfrankbosh
      @mrfrankbosh Рік тому

      @@warrenpeas I used a standard DOT oil drum with bung holes. Which should be the thicker barrel. I used a Bosch metal blade, I have used cheaper blades and they dull very fast. I also poured oil in front of my blade. I did not use a step bit, I used a carbide tipped lenox 1” hole saw and dipped it in used oil before each hole. Oil really helps and expensive bits, so I use oil to give them longer life. Both tools are still good to go. I am impressed with the Bosch jig saw blade. Now the fins and legs I cut with a professional cut off disk on an angle grinder. It was worn down about 50%. No oil on the cutoff wheel. Best of luck. Lots of satisfaction when it’s finished.

    • @warrenpeas
      @warrenpeas Рік тому

      @@mrfrankbosh im almost done. i just have the vent holes for the outter barrel and the vent disk that sits in the bottom. thanks

    • @Twichery
      @Twichery Рік тому +1

      6 legs are better than 4 legs

    • @mrfrankbosh
      @mrfrankbosh Рік тому

      @@Twichery ha ha ha yes they are already lost one leg. Thinking about a cast iron set of legs. I move my barrel often. Still the best burn barrel I have ever made. It is awesome to load and watch.