Wood heater coals from a wood heater or outside campfire...cast iron Dutch oven and a 16 quart steel pot or bricks(flat rocks 4-12" thick will work). Fill cast iron Dutch oven with coals and cover with ash dust to prevent smoke and sit on top of 16 quart pot or flat rocks or bricks. Stir occasionally and refill.
Consider something else, instead of the terracotta pot heater. They have cracked and fallen apart, causing house fires in the UK. A metal cooking pot works just as well.
IMO, that terracotta pot heater is just stupid.. candles bring exactly the same amount of heat in the room, with or without the pots, because they dont have chimney...
I've tried using that terra cotta pot method. It didn't do anything as far as providing any heat for my small space with low ceiling. but it looks nice.
Hey, Spotti Dottie! Did you find the answer to your question? There are a lot of videos showing how to make emergency candles with Crisco or vegetable shortening. When the shortening melts it becomes an oil that fuels the flame on the wick. Search for the video about a 72 hour emergency candle. Someone said you can actually use a dry spaghetti noodle for a wick. I am going to experiment with that. I think I will try three noodles bunched together to make a bigger flame. Have fun and be safe!🕯️
Here's the problem. Alcohol isn't cheap. Sterno isn't cheap. A lot of people won't have flower pots and a dozen candles lying around the house. Build and test these things before you really need them. Don't wait until the last minute to start looking for parts.
Amen. You can't learn how to start a fire or build a heater when you have frozen fingers and you are hopping around to stay warm. You need to build things or buy things BEFORE you need things. Then, you need to PRACTICE using them so you can do it under stress. (BTDT in the high Rockies mountains, in a July snowstorm!)
It's cheap enough and most people will have a Terra cotta pot and 2 bricks and a candle but the small candles he is using don't last I've used a larger candle under a Terra cotta pot turned upside down on a couple bricks. Heats up the whole room. Thr alcohol and toilet paper one most people have that. Maybe you should think of the cleverness of using these things that I have used and have worked to ease some of my suffering and appreciate the effort out into trying to help people who are freezing. I'm grateful for anything anybody can teach me that will make my life easier and I have a friend right now who I am trying to find ways for him to get warm he is very sick and freezing cold. His friend is making him a ceramic ne right now. So as not impressive as you think these ideas are, I am twice that grateful.
These are relatively simple to build, but they aren't going to heat most people's spaces. The short answer is "BTU's". For a bit more information, consider this excerpt that I snagged from another web page that's trying to help people understand why it doesn't work as expected: ~~~ _"Can you heat an entire room with just 4 tealights? Sure. If the temperature outside is not much lower than what you want the indoor temperature to be, and your room is well insulated, and you're willing to wait a long time. If those conditions aren't met, you can't do it. If the temperature differential between indoors and outdoors is high, and your house isn't well insulated, heat will be lost to the outdoors faster than your candles can provide heat. And even if your room is well insulated, it's going to take a very long time for those candles to do the job."_ _"Look at it this way. According to Wikipedia, a single tealight has an energy output of about 100 BTU/hr. A small space heater, capable of heating a small room, is 5000 BTU/hr. Thus, you actually would need fifty candles to heat the room as efficiently as a space heater, instead of just four. So let's suppose a space heater would take one hour to heat the room up. It'll take the candles over twelve hours to do the job (considering the burn-life of a typical tealight is well under twelve hours, we have a serious problem!). And remember that this is under the "ideal" conditions, where you're not losing heat to the outdoors more quickly than the candles can produce it."_ ~~~ Here's an example calculation from another web page that makes it very clear that a tealight heater isn't sufficient for even small rooms: ~~~ _"Using our formula from above, a 1,000 square-foot workspace with 8-foot ceiling height means you’ll be heating 8,000 cubic feet of space. If the temperature outside is 30°F and you’d like it to be 70°F in your garage, the desired temperature change is 40°F. Those two numbers multiplied by .133 reveals you’ll need a little more than 42,500 BTUs per hour to keep your workspace at 70 degrees."_ ~~~ I'm not sharing this information to put you down. I'm sharing it because if people are going to rely on these kinds of devices to keep them warm in the case where the power goes out, they're going to be mighty cold. And, we haven't even begun to talk about the importance of airflow when using an open flame in a closed space. A fire needs oxygen. If you're in a small space and you don't have an opening to fresh air, the flame is going to use some of the oxygen in your closed room. And if you happen to be sleeping when the oxygen level in the room drops below a certain threshhold, it's very likely that you'll die in that room with the pretty little heater that can't keep the space warm. Don't die. Live. Cheers!
@@WellnessWizdom It depends on the size of the room. Consider: Let's say that the room is 30 feet by 20 feet by 8 feet, or 4800 cubic feet. I believe that high carbon dioxide levels will kill you before low oxygen levels will. Inhaled carbon dioxide is 0.04% by volume, exhaled is a bit over 4%. Inhaled oxygen is 21%, exhaled 15%, a difference of 6%. A person breathes about 6 liters per minute, or roughly 9000 liters/day or roughly 300 cubic feet/day. Thus that person will decrease room oxygen by 300 x 6% = 18 cubic feet/day. He will increase room carbon dioxide by 300 x 4% = 12 cubic feet/day. Comfortable carbon dioxide levels are less than 1000 ppm (parts per million) (0.1% of room air). Dangerous levels are above 10,000 ppm, especially above 30,000 ppm. Let's take 30,000 ppm (3% of room air) as our death point, although obviously that's arbitrary. 0.03 times 4800 = 144 cubic feet of carbon dioxide in the room would be deadly. 144 / 12 (cubic feet of CO2 exhaled per day) = 12 days to death in that sealed room. Originally there were 4800 (room cu ft) * 0.21 = 1000 cu ft of oxygen (rounded) After 12 days, 18 (cu ft/day of oxygen decrease) x 12 = 216 cubic feet oxygen lost. That leaves 784 cubic feet of oxygen in the room, or 784/4800 = a little over 16% oxygen in the air. While people will have symptoms at 15% or less, it would be rare to die with oxygen levels above 10%. So my conclusion is that in the above scenario, a person would die in around 12 days, and from carbon dioxide toxicity rather than oxygen deprivation. Reference: www.physicsforums.com/threads/how-long-can-one-live-in-a-sealed-room.685796/
UCO says their Candleir puts out 5000 BTUs from three candles. How did they come up with that number? I wonder if that's the total from 9 hours of burning or is it just wishful thinking?
I haven't seen a heater like this with enough BTU's to heat up more than a linen closet. And then there is the carbon monoxide factor. Some say leave a window open a bit but that is the opposite of heating.
@@rangerannie5636 They have many names.Firestick was used in the video to refer to the ferrocerium rod. Notice how badly it was used in the video- sparks everywhere. Luckily, one landed on the fuel.
Alcohol stoves with alcohol, they work but u gotta keep an eye on them. Once that flame goes out, your gonna have a serious amount of fumes, I know from, experience, im in my 60,s, them Terry cotta ones , u gotta keep a eye on them too. Cuz they have a tendency for the pot to break,
According to research, the heating power of one candle is 80W. Therefore 20 candles are about the equivalent of one 1600W space heater. A candle heat source of 1600W combined is able to heat a room thoroughly. However, having 20 candles in your room is a fire hazard. Let’s cover the better alternatives. How many watts does a candle Get some non-toxic beeswax candles and metal cans.
Ok, this "research" that's so popular (is that looking things up online then?) doesn't always align with reality. You would think that the candles equaling the 1600 BTU theoretically can heat a whole room. But I have experience otherwise. It depends on the size of the room, of course, but a lot more than this is needed to heat a room. Maybe not 20 candles, but at least half that. Additionally, it's a peculiar thing about candle heat. They only hear the air in waves of intense heat that rises quickly. They do not heat the walls, floors, or much of anything else. Candles make a good addition to a low level of traditional heat source in a room.
Not too worried about the candles, but anything else is a serious carbon monoxide generator - and in a closed room can be deadly. Carbon monoxide is an orderless and colorless gas produced by burning wood, charcoal briquettes, oil, or fuel. My cousin and his friends brought a small barbecue with burning charcoal into a cabin for heat while they slept Two out of the four (my cousin) died during sleep because of carbon monoxide poisoning.
The important thing to do is to look at your options. DIY heat source On UA-cam Can you play around and find what works for you. What you make is only needed. When it's needed.
I watched a video where the guy had the terra cotta one hanging in his boat and it almost started a fire. Big char mark on the wall. Plus the pot gets super hot. Be careful if you do that one.
Burning stuff to keep warm is a losing proposition, a luxury. Spend your money on warm clothes, layers. Maybe get a few of those stick-on heat patches for when you need them. Get a warm sleeping bag or something like it. Save your fuel to cook food.
Get a camping wood stove cut a piece of wood to put the chimney out a window and you have a small room that heated and you can heat things up on it also to eat
I've made the toilet paper heater and you need to remove the hard paper core first. Also, the candle heaters do not work very well. First, you cannot violate the First Law of Thermodynamics as a candle can only give off a given much heat. Instead of directing the heat to one narrow point, they absorb the heat and then radiate it but it takes time to heat up and can only produce the heat inside any given candle. But, they have their purpose. And, be careful as they can be be spilled or knocked over. Peace Ya'll.
The terracotta pot space heaters have shown to be wrong, I was fooled by them too over a decade ago. You're best off having the candles heating the room freely instead of wasting the heat heating the pot which will then radiate less heat out in to the room. Other's who can explain the physics of heat and thermal conductivity have explained it better than me in videos here on UA-cam.
forget the tea candle BS. you can just burn the candles. they only produce so much heat and it's not enough to heat a room unless you light a load of them. the alcohol works, but this way of heating is expensive like hell.
Here’s the real truth you can’t heat a room or dwelling with a device that can’t achieve a decent btu output at minimum to heat one room in 20f temps you will need at least 25000 btu output can’t do this with a few candles let alone several hundred. Also you cannot increase or double btu output in any physical way I’m aware of.
It’s November 18 in Maryland and flowers like iris and vinca are blooming in 60+ degrees. That’s way off. Virginia bluebells last spring were blooming three weeks earlier than they did four years ago. Warming when there shouldn’t be doesn’t mean there won’t be a cold spell. It doesn’t mean it will be summer all year. But we haven’t had a decent snowfall here in years.
3 problems with this: First, if you have an open flame, you risk a fire you don't want. Second, carbon monoxide can take you out. And third, burning things generates soot, which will get on everything. Besides, these methods aren't going to heat up much more than a homeless cardboard shanty.
sorry, but that terracotta pot heater is just stupid.. candles bring exactly the same amount of heat in the room, with or without the pots, because they dont have chimney...
Dont forget to turn off that pesky carbon monoxide detector before doing this. . .🐱👈🤗look mom ....sarcastic cat,way safer for warming your lap and also hunts rodents when not in use🐁🐿️
Wood heater coals from a wood heater or outside campfire...cast iron Dutch oven and a 16 quart steel pot or bricks(flat rocks 4-12" thick will work).
Fill cast iron Dutch oven with coals and cover with ash dust to prevent smoke and sit on top of 16 quart pot or flat rocks or bricks. Stir occasionally and refill.
Thank you for this video.
Please please please
everyone remember
non-negotiable rule #1;
"SAFETY FIRST"!!!🔥🔥🔥
Consider something else, instead of the terracotta pot heater. They have cracked and fallen apart, causing house fires in the UK. A metal cooking pot works just as well.
cast iron with sand in the bottom one
@@God-s_Kingdom
With cast iron you can burn coal, coal burns at 1500F, when you add air it doubles.
IMO, that terracotta pot heater is just stupid.. candles bring exactly the same amount of heat in the room, with or without the pots, because they dont have chimney...
you really need to learn about heat sinks and mass holding and releasing heat, @@Pedro-1979
I wondered about the clay pots becoming brittle after too much heat.
I've tried using that terra cotta pot method. It didn't do anything as far as providing any heat for my small space with low ceiling. but it looks nice.
I use a candle in a container of vegetable shortening (inside of a metal can) to heat my garage. Use 100% beeswax candles. Works fantastic.
You can use any candle. Even a birthday candle.
What's the purpose of the shortening please? Thanks
@@spottidottie5849fuel. The candle is the wick
@@spottidottie5849
The shortening is the fuel.
Hey, Spotti Dottie!
Did you find the answer to your question? There are a lot of videos showing how to make emergency candles with Crisco or vegetable shortening. When the shortening melts it becomes an oil that fuels the flame on the wick. Search for the video about a 72 hour emergency candle.
Someone said you can actually use a dry spaghetti noodle for a wick. I am going to experiment with that. I think I will try three noodles bunched together to make a bigger flame.
Have fun and be safe!🕯️
Here's the problem. Alcohol isn't cheap. Sterno isn't cheap. A lot of people won't have flower pots and a dozen candles lying around the house. Build and test these things before you really need them. Don't wait until the last minute to start looking for parts.
Cheap or not being prepared is better AND cheaper than frostbite, and that is the point of emergency heat!
@@librasun123 exactly. Be prepared.
Amen. You can't learn how to start a fire or build a heater when you have frozen fingers and you are hopping around to stay warm.
You need to build things or buy things BEFORE you need things.
Then, you need to PRACTICE using them so you can do it under stress. (BTDT in the high Rockies mountains, in a July snowstorm!)
It's cheap enough and most people will have a Terra cotta pot and 2 bricks and a candle but the small candles he is using don't last I've used a larger candle under a Terra cotta pot turned upside down on a couple bricks. Heats up the whole room. Thr alcohol and toilet paper one most people have that. Maybe you should think of the cleverness of using these things that I have used and have worked to ease some of my suffering and appreciate the effort out into trying to help people who are freezing. I'm grateful for anything anybody can teach me that will make my life easier and I have a friend right now who I am trying to find ways for him to get warm he is very sick and freezing cold. His friend is making him a ceramic ne right now. So as not impressive as you think these ideas are, I am twice that grateful.
😂😂 alcohol 70% it's a dollar!
These are relatively simple to build, but they aren't going to heat most people's spaces. The short answer is "BTU's". For a bit more information, consider this excerpt that I snagged from another web page that's trying to help people understand why it doesn't work as expected:
~~~
_"Can you heat an entire room with just 4 tealights? Sure. If the temperature outside is not much lower than what you want the indoor temperature to be, and your room is well insulated, and you're willing to wait a long time. If those conditions aren't met, you can't do it. If the temperature differential between indoors and outdoors is high, and your house isn't well insulated, heat will be lost to the outdoors faster than your candles can provide heat. And even if your room is well insulated, it's going to take a very long time for those candles to do the job."_
_"Look at it this way. According to Wikipedia, a single tealight has an energy output of about 100 BTU/hr. A small space heater, capable of heating a small room, is 5000 BTU/hr. Thus, you actually would need fifty candles to heat the room as efficiently as a space heater, instead of just four. So let's suppose a space heater would take one hour to heat the room up. It'll take the candles over twelve hours to do the job (considering the burn-life of a typical tealight is well under twelve hours, we have a serious problem!). And remember that this is under the "ideal" conditions, where you're not losing heat to the outdoors more quickly than the candles can produce it."_
~~~
Here's an example calculation from another web page that makes it very clear that a tealight heater isn't sufficient for even small rooms:
~~~
_"Using our formula from above, a 1,000 square-foot workspace with 8-foot ceiling height means you’ll be heating 8,000 cubic feet of space. If the temperature outside is 30°F and you’d like it to be 70°F in your garage, the desired temperature change is 40°F. Those two numbers multiplied by .133 reveals you’ll need a little more than 42,500 BTUs per hour to keep your workspace at 70 degrees."_
~~~
I'm not sharing this information to put you down. I'm sharing it because if people are going to rely on these kinds of devices to keep them warm in the case where the power goes out, they're going to be mighty cold. And, we haven't even begun to talk about the importance of airflow when using an open flame in a closed space. A fire needs oxygen. If you're in a small space and you don't have an opening to fresh air, the flame is going to use some of the oxygen in your closed room. And if you happen to be sleeping when the oxygen level in the room drops below a certain threshhold, it's very likely that you'll die in that room with the pretty little heater that can't keep the space warm.
Don't die. Live. Cheers!
If there's no opening to fresh air in the small room they're sleeping in, they're going to die anyway, fire or not.
@@WellnessWizdom It depends on the size of the room. Consider:
Let's say that the room is 30 feet by 20 feet by 8 feet, or 4800 cubic feet. I believe that high carbon dioxide levels will kill you before low oxygen levels will. Inhaled carbon dioxide is 0.04% by volume, exhaled is a bit over 4%. Inhaled oxygen is 21%, exhaled 15%, a difference of 6%.
A person breathes about 6 liters per minute, or roughly 9000 liters/day or roughly 300 cubic feet/day. Thus that person will decrease room oxygen by 300 x 6% = 18 cubic feet/day. He will increase room carbon dioxide by 300 x 4% = 12 cubic feet/day.
Comfortable carbon dioxide levels are less than 1000 ppm (parts per million) (0.1% of room air). Dangerous levels are above 10,000 ppm, especially above 30,000 ppm. Let's take 30,000 ppm (3% of room air) as our death point, although obviously that's arbitrary.
0.03 times 4800 = 144 cubic feet of carbon dioxide in the room would be deadly.
144 / 12 (cubic feet of CO2 exhaled per day) = 12 days to death in that sealed room.
Originally there were 4800 (room cu ft) * 0.21 = 1000 cu ft of oxygen (rounded)
After 12 days, 18 (cu ft/day of oxygen decrease) x 12 = 216 cubic feet oxygen lost.
That leaves 784 cubic feet of oxygen in the room, or 784/4800 = a little over 16% oxygen in the air.
While people will have symptoms at 15% or less, it would be rare to die with oxygen levels above 10%.
So my conclusion is that in the above scenario, a person would die in around 12 days, and from carbon dioxide toxicity rather than oxygen deprivation.
Reference: www.physicsforums.com/threads/how-long-can-one-live-in-a-sealed-room.685796/
UCO says their Candleir puts out 5000 BTUs from three candles. How did they come up with that number? I wonder if that's the total from 9 hours of burning or is it just wishful thinking?
Sort of what I usually say but you are much more in depth. A BTU is a BTU and so many can't wrap their head around that.
If the electric is out, or grid down how you gonna use a space heaters!!!
I haven't seen a heater like this with enough BTU's to heat up more than a linen closet. And then there is the carbon monoxide factor. Some say leave a window open a bit but that is the opposite of heating.
If you use alcohol indoors use HEET gas line anti freeze to reduce soot.
Or use denatured alcohol.
Use crisco shortening and a long candle
The firestick is supposed to be using for outdoor camping, and matches or a butane lighter is for candles or indoor stoves.
Firestick? Did you by chance mean "Ferro Rod"?
@@rangerannie5636 They have many names.Firestick was used in the video to refer to the ferrocerium rod. Notice how badly it was used in the video- sparks everywhere. Luckily, one landed on the fuel.
Be careful in small rooms. The fumes can kill you.
toilet paper is like gold....can anything else be used?
I woudnt bother.Alcohol is very expensive and burns out very fast. You would need several bottles daily to warm anything up.
Alcohol stoves with alcohol, they work but u gotta keep an eye on them. Once that flame goes out, your gonna have a serious amount of fumes, I know from, experience, im in my 60,s, them Terry cotta ones , u gotta keep a eye on them too. Cuz they have a tendency for the pot to break,
With cast iron you can burn coal, coal burns at 1500F, wne you add air it doubles.
According to research, the heating power of one candle is 80W. Therefore 20 candles are about the equivalent of one 1600W space heater. A candle heat source of 1600W combined is able to heat a room thoroughly. However, having 20 candles in your room is a fire hazard. Let’s cover the better alternatives.
How many watts does a candle
Get some non-toxic beeswax candles and metal cans.
Ok, this "research" that's so popular (is that looking things up online then?) doesn't always align with reality. You would think that the candles equaling the 1600 BTU theoretically can heat a whole room. But I have experience otherwise. It depends on the size of the room, of course, but a lot more than this is needed to heat a room. Maybe not 20 candles, but at least half that. Additionally, it's a peculiar thing about candle heat. They only hear the air in waves of intense heat that rises quickly. They do not heat the walls, floors, or much of anything else. Candles make a good addition to a low level of traditional heat source in a room.
Soy Wax not beeswax. Beeswax causes soot.
Not too worried about the candles, but anything else is a serious carbon monoxide generator - and in a closed room can be deadly.
Carbon monoxide is an orderless and colorless gas produced by burning wood, charcoal briquettes, oil, or fuel.
My cousin and his friends brought a small barbecue with burning charcoal into a cabin for heat while they slept Two out of the four (my cousin) died during sleep because of carbon monoxide poisoning.
I am sooo sorry
My deepest sympathies and prayers for you and your family. I'm so sorry that happened to you.
Sorry for your loss...🥺
The important thing to do is to look at your options.
DIY heat source
On UA-cam
Can you play around and find what works for you.
What you make is only needed. When it's needed.
Thank you for the info. Great in times of necessity.
You’re welcome, hopefully it helps!
What about the fumes from buring that in your closed up home??
if you make terra cotta heater dont let the tea candles touch keep them spread out. to much heaT makes wax ooze out into floor and bolt and then fire.
With cast iron you can burn coal, coal burns at 1500F, when you add air it doubles.
I watched a video where the guy had the terra cotta one hanging in his boat and it almost started a fire. Big char mark on the wall. Plus the pot gets super hot. Be careful if you do that one.
If these are your backup plans, your screwed
How long will each last? How big of an area will each heat?
Good thanks
Burning stuff to keep warm is a losing proposition, a luxury. Spend your money on warm clothes, layers. Maybe get a few of those stick-on heat patches for when you need them. Get a warm sleeping bag or something like it. Save your fuel to cook food.
Thank ya for sharing. ❤😊
You are so welcome 😊
And when the soot builds up in that clay pot?
There is a reason chimney sweeps make good money. They keep your house from burning down
Be careful with CO2
Get a camping wood stove cut a piece of wood to put the chimney out a window and you have a small room that heated and you can heat things up on it also to eat
Good idea.
Theory works.
I've made the toilet paper heater and you need to remove the hard paper core first. Also, the candle heaters do not work very well. First, you cannot violate the First Law of Thermodynamics as a candle can only give off a given much heat. Instead of directing the heat to one narrow point, they absorb the heat and then radiate it but it takes time to heat up and can only produce the heat inside any given candle. But, they have their purpose. And, be careful as they can be be spilled or knocked over. Peace Ya'll.
3:12 😂
You’ll want as much heat as possible to be trapped by DEEZ NUTS. Hahahahaha
Glad someone gets it 😂
💀💀💀
Tlights close together can explode
@3:14 he says "Deez nuts" !!! Hahaha
For those of you who are stuck without electricity and sleeping in a tent while the temperaturea are drastically dropping.
Major Fire Hazzard. Don't Do This. Be warned before you burn your home down.
Great! except 3rd? loop? link? in chain too fast and unclear to me. I will experiment!
The terracotta pot space heaters have shown to be wrong, I was fooled by them too over a decade ago.
You're best off having the candles heating the room freely instead of wasting the heat heating the pot which will then radiate less heat out in to the room.
Other's who can explain the physics of heat and thermal conductivity have explained it better than me in videos here on UA-cam.
What about fire alarms - in most houses and flats now.
forget the tea candle BS. you can just burn the candles. they only produce so much heat and it's not enough to heat a room unless you light a load of them. the alcohol works, but this way of heating is expensive like hell.
its not a good idea to use an open flame like the ideas given here, I am very surprised there was no mention of the need for fresh air.
Next call fire department
Sounds like recipes for people to have accidental fires
Ceramic pot heater is more like a 💣 don't use
If you have to buy anything, it’s not free.
You will have plenty of heat when your house is burning down because of this nonsense.
😂😂😂😂
Just remember: carbon monoxide poisoning is real
Fireproof rocks???
What happened after the first 4 seconds
2:30. 14and1/2 inch nuts!!!... What??? Did I hear that correctly?
LOVELOVELOVE!!!
WHAT THE TEMPERTER ?WILL BE HOT?
These really do not throw off enough heat for comfort, but might be okay for survival. There are better ways.
You are wrong the terracotta one works good.
Here’s the real truth you can’t heat a room or dwelling with a device that can’t achieve a decent btu output at minimum to heat one room in 20f temps you will need at least 25000 btu output can’t do this with a few candles let alone several hundred. Also you cannot increase or double btu output in any physical way I’m aware of.
According to the climate lunatics, none of these setups should be needed because they keep telling us that the whole planet is heating up.
Have you noticed that? All this yarping about global warming but Winters are getting colder.
It’s November 18 in Maryland and flowers like iris and vinca are blooming in 60+ degrees. That’s way off. Virginia bluebells last spring were blooming three weeks earlier than they did four years ago. Warming when there shouldn’t be doesn’t mean there won’t be a cold spell. It doesn’t mean it will be summer all year. But we haven’t had a decent snowfall here in years.
😅🤣😂😆😄 climate cult
There is the problem of keeping your pipes unfrozen.
I made one once and it didn't work so well.
👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
🤔
Another heating scam on UA-cam.
just turn the stove on.
Not seventy percent of alcohol it won't burn you have to have ninety percent
3:14
90%!!! GAS ONLY!!!
3 problems with this:
First, if you have an open flame, you risk a fire you don't want. Second, carbon monoxide can take you out. And third, burning things generates soot, which will get on everything.
Besides, these methods aren't going to heat up much more than a homeless cardboard shanty.
I guarantee you, my LED lights and backup lights will last way longer than these candles and sterno will😂😂😂😂
House is cold on living rooms
Ne ,to je opasno za ..
They aren't good u might be able to heat a small dog house with them .they don't put out enough heat and are expensive to use
Tried this, even in my T5 VW transporter campervan, useless. It such a hoax!
Trie which? Terra Cotta heaters work if done right. I use larger, which pots and lots of Crisco candles.
83 subscribers really?
121 now
Heating Dez nuts lol 😂😂
Gotta luv the wannabe but oblivious
these nuts 3:13
None of these work to warm up any space. I've tried them all. All crap!
These are what you called paranoid people that stocked up on all this stuff
So dangerous
What a joke is this for people living in Florida 😂
I'm a child 3:14
And they expect you to live your life based on how they live their lives. Sorry I don’t live in the middle of a country I’m more of a city person.😂😂😂
Rubbish
sorry, but that terracotta pot heater is just stupid.. candles bring exactly the same amount of heat in the room, with or without the pots, because they dont have chimney...
Dont forget to turn off that pesky carbon monoxide detector before doing this.
.
.🐱👈🤗look mom ....sarcastic cat,way safer for warming your lap and also hunts rodents when not in use🐁🐿️
Dude, you're in the wrong market. Take your invention to the homeless.
Was für ein Schwachsinn. Wer ein bisschen Ahnung von Thermodynamik hat, kann über diesen Unfug hier nur lachen.
What a crock of shit. None of these contraptions will warm up a small room on a moderately chill night, much less on a cold one.