Nice video. This concept and design has been around for years. My thoughts/comments are: 1) If you're going through the whole process of making forms and pouring concrete, just make 1 form and make it for the entire size of the tank. Better stability, less chance of the pads coming through bottom of the tank. That's how stock tanks are designed to work. 2) For the heater, build and actual fireplace around your copper pipe and increase the number of coils. That will get your temperatures up and more constant. 3) To retain heat, wrap the tank in insulation and make a decorative outer wrap. Good information tho! 😁😁😁😁
I completed this project today just as you explained. It is currently 28 degrees so it is taking me a bit longer to heat up. I did put a cover on and tarp to contain some heat. Great video. I am an arborist and own and operate a tree service so I have plenty of wood to burn. I will definitely enjoy a hot tub when I'm at 10,000 feet in my off grid cabin. Thanks for sharing the great info.
Can't help but chuckle a little of how this reminds me of Looney Tunes where they'd lure someone in thinking it was a hot tub and really be making them into a stew. haha. Looks relaxing! And also looks good for ice baths.
This was pretty well thought out. One serious thing though, because of electrolysis between dissimilar metals there can eventually be corrosion between the copper tubing and steel bars. If you use stainless steel instead for the steel bars it will be ok.
Quick suggestions. Change the steel/iron support bars to copper if you are going to leave it outside. The dissimilar metals will start corroding much faster then if they are the same metal. The other solution is wrap the copper tubing around something that is being heated by the fire. This will allow much better heat transfer into the water so you can wrap more more turns and have more hot water. Great video and concept.
Super well done!! A huge amount of heat loss is from the ground/concrete/sand, put some foam insulation under it to keep it warm longer and less fuel to hear it.
I built my own also and used boiler tube and enclosed the heating coils in a large piece of pipe. It heated fast and after it got hot it took very little fire to keep it warm. Good job!
Thermosiphon is how the water circulates. Cold water is dense, heat rises, creates a natural circulation. Thumbnail girl: i.ytimg.com/vi/HMjpWlgcK-M/maxresdefault.jpg
Here are a few ideas you, or someone making this, may find useful. You could wrap the copper around 8" Duct Pipe from a Stove and move this unit inside. Also you could make more loops closer together so it heats the water faster. Having the copper wrap around the Stove Pipe would keep the smoke at bay and allow the heating to be a bit more efficient. Depending on the Drum you use for the Burner, you may want to make multiple Copper Runs to Multiple Stove Pipes to allow for faster heating of the water, perhaps a copper pipe for each side. Also you may want to install some sort of circulation pump to move the water a bit faster to keep hot spots from taking place. Or you just might want to put a Pound Pump in the Tank to just circulate the water that way. Of you could must make a Copper Run, two connectors at the bottom with a Circulation Pump only, to circulate just the Tub Water so that is move the Cold Water constantly. Great Project....
Great idea. Add a check valve to the bottom side of the pipe. This will help when pressure is built up and push out the hot water to the top. Don't know if they make a cooper check valve. But could use a regular pvc bc the heat isn't much on the intake side. Excellent vid👍🏽👍🏽
This is why when building a home you put your wood burning stove directly on the other side of you bathroom/shower/tub. If you have a shared cement or rock wall to hold heat between the stove and the shower as well as run hot water or copper tubing through the wall and into a gravity fed water heater you get free hot water while you warm your home in the winter :)
Yeah very nice. I've been wanting to do one of these for about 7 years now. Never got around to it. I'm glad to see it tried and tested and successful. I have been wanting to make the same thing for my pool, to begin and extend the season here in New England.
I like it, came out great. Probably didn't need to do all that extra work with the concrete pads. I would have removed 2-3" of soil, tamped the soil, then applied a layer of gravel followed by a layer of sand. That tub wouldn't move. The only problem, is having to smell smoke while enjoying that hot water.
Dude great idea, I feel justified because I did similar project.. I have no neighbors so I bathe outside all the time!.. I made a tighter heat-riser coil so it would fit into a stovepipe, mounted on a stove made from a propane cylinder.. tempted to plumb/heat my house same way!.. A plus with using a little stove is that you have control of your fire/coals.. Nice!
Chickens need small rocks for their crawp (gizzard), to grind their food. That's why they were interested in your gravel. Feed and Seed stores sell grit for chickens, as well as crushed shells for calcium for egg shells. Love the tub!
Great vid, the inlet at the top of the tub if you put a 90* on it with another section of copper down into the tub. the terminal siphoning would push the water. So your hot water would enter the tub from the bottom, Evenly heat the tub
Been using one of those tanks for several years, but I just set it up on rocks and build a fire underneath it. After all it's a metal tank. But I do have to rake the fire out before getting in and then have a limited time to stay in, unless I want to make a grid floor to sit on above the bottom which I haven't. After a number of years use the seams got to leaking a bit too much so I caulked them. Eventually I'll make a better one for more people, since the oval tank is only large enough for 2.
What a cool idea, It's easy to do and the design is very flexible. The way things are going globally this could be the bathtub of the future!!!! 😂😂😂😂😂😂
I think using a heat shield to protect your copper from direct flames would help it to last longer, as well applying a spray in liner to the stock tank would make it more comfortable and prevent rust.
The enclosure for the fire would also probably help you regulate temperature better. You could have a door which allows heat to escape when open, or maintain it when closed.
When I was a kid in Croatia we had a wood-heated bathtub where there was a water tank (similar to today's water heaters you find in your basement, but only about a foot in diameter). There was a place to put the wood in right uner it. When the water was hot we filled the bath. The tank kept filled up and kept heating as the wood burned. Great baths, never this much wasted wood. Was too young to remember the other details of it.
A Czech friend of mine did something similar but had done it with a small above ground swimming pool and the water was circulating through the pools Pump . The coil of copper pipe were in the fire box of his home made smoker . So while waiting for freshly smoked meat and cheese we had a pool party in winter . Czechneck engineering was my comment !
A friend did that with a bigger tub for 2. She set it on the ground, filled it with water, dug a small hole at one end and built a very small fire in the hole. Worked great.
that's not the worst concern, if someone tries to isolate the coil trough valves the water inside it would transform into steam and make the coil explode! it could work if you drain the coil or move it out of the fire trough flexible tubing
This is a great idea, I will be buying one to do the same. I was wondering, is it okay to use sea salt or will it corrode the tub? Also, will it leach lead?
I was living off the land on Maui in 1976. When invited up to Haiku to stay in a reconditioned chicken shack I discovered the fudo tub. Japanese by design, it was a ferro cement vessel with copper sheeting on the bottom. You could hack up some wood with a cane knife and start a fire right under it. It also had a big hollowed out bamboo cane, on a swivel, to emit overly hot water and a tap to add cool. After camping on the beach and up in the jungle, all my aches and pains were gone in about 15 minutes.
Simple science. Effective. Great for off grid. A drain valve on the tub would turn it into a heated bath tub (using a smaller tub). The coil heating system has several other possibilities too.
Try insulating the tub. You can also create an inclosure for the fire and extend a chimney increase the amount of pipe exposed to the fire and insulate the rest
That's exactly what I was thinking. I nice cedar enclosure for the tub and a clay chiminea for the fire. They burn a lot longer so you would get a lot more time out of the firewood and safer in windy conditions. This way you could close the door to dampen the fire to turn down the heat. But the basic concept of using the copper tubing is really the heart of the idea. Fun I idea to develop further.
Put the copper coil inside something like a rocket stove made out of an old propane tank or old hot water heater. Maybe even coat the inside of tub with porcelain and enclose outside of tank with wooden box to help insulate tub. Maybe even sit the tank inside a wooden box and leave a couple inches on all side and then fill with spray foam?
I did the same. It's just like heating a pot on the stove, only scaled up. Except I raised the tub on old steel car rims. I could have cooked a stew for the whole neighborhood, it was that effective.
Genuine question. Every time you use the tub, do you refill it each time? Or do you leave the water in after each use to refrain from using too much water?
I'm wondering if you could also buy a slightly larger stock tank and put one inside the other and fill the gap with expanding foam to insulate it. That might also make the whole thing more efficient.
You could have packed the coils closer together and implemented them in a concrete rocket stove which warms the water way faster and is much more fuel efficient. (you could build one even with simple clay) Put the stove and the pile of wood within arms reach and u don't have go out the tube to keep the fire going. I have no clue what types of tanks u have over there in your country, but here we have often the same type of tanks just in different sizes. So to keep the water nice and warm even a long time after the fire was put down, I would have bought 2 tanks one a bit bigger than the other and put them in each other with a layer of foam isolation between them. Like a thermos can. It doesn't have to be 2 tanks. Just put something around the tube that isolates enough heat to keep the water warm/hot. (sheets of scrap wood or simply hay wood even do it) And at last, if the double tank is too expensive, I would put a lid on top of the rocket stove with which I could change the size of the top opening, so I could regulate the amount of airflow so I could regulate indirectly the heat in the oven. With this I don't need to put the fire out, it could just keep going on a very low heat. And even if it's too hot I could just close the lid completely to put the fire out.
We use concrete edging around the fire so that it's more like a firepit. This holds the heat and is safer, especially on a windy day. The tub doesn't stay warm enough in colder weather - some type of insulation is needed.
I'm in the midst of building a cabin (We've been hampered by bad weather felling trees and just about every weather mishap you can imagine) the cabin has a shower/toilet room but I think that this idea would be great after a day of freezing in Scotland. ..I think I would build an outhouse with access from the cabin and perhaps fit one of those home made propane tank woodstoves with the coils...I reckon that would keep the outhouse and the water nice and warm. ..I think this is a fantastic idea. .Thanks x
Interesting build. If I do something like this, I will probably build a rocket stove and could the copper around it. I think the rocket stove may be a little more efficient than an open fire.
Awesome! I'd probably end up using a lot more tubing in a chambers, like a boiler tank uses, or an old lead-free radiator (or a few stacked) to gather much more of the heat. But awesome start! Or... heat the tub directly underneath with a skirt and have some smooth layer shielding the user from the floor but will let water flow around under it. 😊
Cool video. Good naration and speed. Your suggestions at the end I totally agree with. I would like to suggest some of mine. I dont know how much you want to upgrade but here goes. First I would definitely change the top water attachment to a metal or both. Second for sure I would insulat the tub.This would reduce heat time more that enlarging the copper tubbibg. But still enlarge it. Add something to protect the head from the cold. Some where to put a towel. I have other idea but don't know how upscale you want to go.
Good intent. You need to isolate the copper tubing from the steel supports otherwise galvanization will occur and the tubing will disintegrate where the two unlike metals are in contact with each other.
great video. a stove inclosure will defintely be the way to go. Wondering what improvements could me made for heat exchange? Is copper tubing the best tubing for the task? Your project just really has my mind working overtime. I have wanted to do a variation of your tub for a long time. thanks again.
I was thinking the same thing. I'd build it up so you add the sticks(not logs) right at the edge, so you can feed it while in it. I've seen sweet pizza ovens using a rocket stove to heat it instead of the standard bonfire. They got it to +900°F in 30 minutes instead of 2 hours. Oh- and no smoke! (if built like a true rocket stove)
In 1967 my father took me on one of his yearly hunting vacations for the 1st time, elk hunting in eastern Oregon. Him and 5 of his buddies had been doing this for many years. Get away from the wives, drink, tell lies, shoot guns, and usually fill the freezer with meat of one kind of another, plus the hides, feathers, leather, eye teeth, antlers... even deer leg tendons dried and scraped and used as a toothpick. I never liked the killing but did use everything that nature and my dad provided. These guys didn't do it to prove they were tough or for attention, quite the contrary. They didn't rough it one bit. There was a campfire going 24/7 at camp, sitting next to it was a 30 gal. aluminum pot with handles and a lid. My dad had tapped the pot and mounted brass hardware so a 4' long 3/4 inch copper loop could be mounted and placed in the fire. The pot was always being refilled and kept on the edge of being too hot to use to wash, in other words... perfect. I like your concept with a couple of modifications. I think the hot (exit) end should be under the water surface it still circulates just fine. And, your plan doesn't take into account the inevitable tsunami that is going to occur when things turn... frisky? A drain into a nearby water feature that can filter grey water would be nice and the chicken wouldn't mind at all. Design a system that feeds pellets into a brick chamber holding the copper tube and save a ton of wood. Good job.
did that myself many years ago with an above ground pool. wrapped copper around a 20 gallon tank, which was the firebox and shoved it into a 55 gal drum to contain the heat.
I like it really cool or rather hot. I get a bit fed up with people saying you should do this you should do that that's not the right way. excellent job
In the 80's when I worked on harbor tugs, some of the boats had what looked like wood burning stove's that ran on diesel oil. On the side with the burner there was a single coil of copper that led to a probably 15 gal tank on the opposite side of the bulkhead and the same set up with just convection to circulate the water. On long days you'd have to be careful because the hot water coming out of the tap would be hot enough to scald you.
pink foam underneath, and spread in/out, say you stove take vertical 33gal barrel wood stove, put lg coppipe on bottom of the tank, any valve to reg flow goes this side then pipe gets slightly smaller, could add find to pickup more heat, or just add flame with chimney under tube(mini-rocket stove to bring up 180gals first GL good stuff, I own/made one of these
Unless you happen to live off the grid and what a DIY Hot tub for the occasional bath? However judging from your comment you've only had to turn your wrist to get this satisfaction. Some people like to escape the dependence of the system and work a little for this sort of thing.
I'd say to insulate the the tub to retain the heat also..Maybe sand or vermiculite since it's light.. Great vid and thanks for sharing the knowledge !!
Did you tried canging the sides of coil. Like the top output of the coil head to the bottom of the tub? I think it would make the heating process more efficient.
I built one few years back (used 12 volt solar pump) more coils, and found that soot built up a crust around the coils over time, they get less and less effective, to fix this I wrapped coils around barrel letting the barrel get dirty then the coils.. barrel doesn't build up like the copper coils.. don't know if its the material or the water cooling the soot forming the crust. but does not form on barrel... I also added a drain plug to clean out tub.
Nice video. This concept and design has been around for years.
My thoughts/comments are: 1) If you're going through the whole process of making forms and pouring concrete, just make 1 form and make it for the entire size of the tank. Better stability, less chance of the pads coming through bottom of the tank. That's how stock tanks are designed to work. 2) For the heater, build and actual fireplace around your copper pipe and increase the number of coils. That will get your temperatures up and more constant. 3) To retain heat, wrap the tank in insulation and make a decorative outer wrap.
Good information tho! 😁😁😁😁
I completed this project today just as you explained. It is currently 28 degrees so it is taking me a bit longer to heat up. I did put a cover on and tarp to contain some heat. Great video. I am an arborist and own and operate a tree service so I have plenty of wood to burn. I will definitely enjoy a hot tub when I'm at 10,000 feet in my off grid cabin. Thanks for sharing the great info.
Can't help but chuckle a little of how this reminds me of Looney Tunes where they'd lure someone in thinking it was a hot tub and really be making them into a stew. haha. Looks relaxing! And also looks good for ice baths.
This was pretty well thought out. One serious thing though, because of electrolysis between dissimilar metals there can eventually be corrosion between the copper tubing and steel bars. If you use stainless steel instead for the steel bars it will be ok.
Quick suggestions. Change the steel/iron support bars to copper if you are going to leave it outside. The dissimilar metals will start corroding much faster then if they are the same metal. The other solution is wrap the copper tubing around something that is being heated by the fire. This will allow much better heat transfer into the water so you can wrap more more turns and have more hot water. Great video and concept.
Did you work on aircraft?
Super well done!! A huge amount of heat loss is from the ground/concrete/sand, put some foam insulation under it to keep it warm longer and less fuel to hear it.
I built my own also and used boiler tube and enclosed the heating coils in a large piece of pipe. It heated fast and after it got hot it took very little fire to keep it warm. Good job!
the stock tanks come with a built in drain and plug that a hose can screw into. nice for watering the garden after a long soak.
but how does the water circulate? and also.. there was a girl in the bathtub, you shrek ! you transform by night or what?
Thermosiphon is how the water circulates. Cold water is dense, heat rises, creates a natural circulation.
Thumbnail girl: i.ytimg.com/vi/HMjpWlgcK-M/maxresdefault.jpg
yellow2000SR
that is pretty cool, thank you :-)
alaskan bush people just copied this
flyback 2me
what are you talking about? who's hawk?
Here are a few ideas you, or someone making this, may find useful.
You could wrap the copper around 8" Duct Pipe from a Stove and move this unit inside. Also you could make more loops closer together so it heats the water faster.
Having the copper wrap around the Stove Pipe would keep the smoke at bay and allow the heating to be a bit more efficient. Depending on the Drum you use for the Burner, you may want to make multiple Copper Runs to Multiple Stove Pipes to allow for faster heating of the water, perhaps a copper pipe for each side.
Also you may want to install some sort of circulation pump to move the water a bit faster to keep hot spots from taking place.
Or you just might want to put a Pound Pump in the Tank to just circulate the water that way. Of you could must make a Copper Run, two connectors at the bottom with a Circulation Pump only, to circulate just the Tub Water so that is move the Cold Water constantly.
Great Project....
good ideas! thanks!
I've always wanted an outside tub...ever since the FALL GUY tv series! !!!love it man 👍👍👍
Can't wait to play with this idea. Been wanting to make and outdoor hot tub for a while. Thanks Ben.
Great idea. Add a check valve to the bottom side of the pipe. This will help when pressure is built up and push out the hot water to the top. Don't know if they make a cooper check valve. But could use a regular pvc bc the heat isn't much on the intake side. Excellent vid👍🏽👍🏽
This is why when building a home you put your wood burning stove directly on the other side of you bathroom/shower/tub. If you have a shared cement or rock wall to hold heat between the stove and the shower as well as run hot water or copper tubing through the wall and into a gravity fed water heater you get free hot water while you warm your home in the winter :)
we rinsed off the chickens feet :)
HomeMadeModern maybe try building a cob oven around the coil, which would greatly increase the efficiency
And that is why I love you.
HomeMadeModern z
You are a good human!
great vid! and, also good display of great carpentry skills bruh! I am jelly
Awesome project. It's a good thing you have that tall fence or your neighbors would think you're crazy lol
Ahhhh! watching the chickens zoom around makes me sooo Happy!
Yeah very nice. I've been wanting to do one of these for about 7 years now. Never got around to it. I'm glad to see it tried and tested and successful. I have been wanting to make the same thing for my pool, to begin and extend the season here in New England.
I like it, came out great. Probably didn't need to do all that extra work with the concrete pads. I would have removed 2-3" of soil, tamped the soil, then applied a layer of gravel followed by a layer of sand. That tub wouldn't move. The only problem, is having to smell smoke while enjoying that hot water.
Dude great idea, I feel justified because I did similar project.. I have no neighbors so I bathe outside all the time!.. I made a tighter heat-riser coil so it would fit into a stovepipe, mounted on a stove made from a propane cylinder.. tempted to plumb/heat my house same way!.. A plus with using a little stove is that you have control of your fire/coals.. Nice!
Cool, but I want to see a wood fired infinity pool next ;)
Jackman Works or a Lazarus Pit!
This is going to be the next project I do! I've been planning it for a little while but this one is heaps simpler than what I was planning.
awesome! share some photos with us when you do :)
HomeMadeModern for sure! I was planning to have it done by now but it's been pushed down the things to do list... maybe next month!
Chickens need small rocks for their crawp (gizzard), to grind their food. That's why they were interested in your gravel. Feed and Seed stores sell grit for chickens, as well as crushed shells for calcium for egg shells. Love the tub!
Great vid, the inlet at the top of the tub if you put a 90* on it with another section of copper down into the tub.
the terminal siphoning would push the water. So your hot water would enter the tub from the bottom, Evenly heat the tub
I love how people with tiny yards are the most creative.
Been using one of those tanks for several years, but I just set it up on rocks and build a fire underneath it. After all it's a metal tank. But I do have to rake the fire out before getting in and then have a limited time to stay in, unless I want to make a grid floor to sit on above the bottom which I haven't. After a number of years use the seams got to leaking a bit too much so I caulked them. Eventually I'll make a better one for more people, since the oval tank is only large enough for 2.
Man I could really use one of those right now. This would be great after long hours of work.
I've done this with my pool about 5 years. Pretty shocking how well it works
Excellent idea! Hot water from the fire! Super!
Toss in your chickens and a few vegetables and you have yourself a chicken stew! lulz...
Very nice!
Animal abuse!
Xavier Mondragon Jr fuck you dude
Xavier Mondragon Jr cooking!*
Elazul2k in the same tub ;)
What a cool idea, It's easy to do and the design is very flexible. The way things are going globally this could be the bathtub of the future!!!! 😂😂😂😂😂😂
You have such a talent! Loved the creativity of this project. Big fan!
I think using a heat shield to protect your copper from direct flames would help it to last longer, as well applying a spray in liner to the stock tank would make it more comfortable and prevent rust.
The enclosure for the fire would also probably help you regulate temperature better. You could have a door which allows heat to escape when open, or maintain it when closed.
When I was a kid in Croatia we had a wood-heated bathtub where there was a water tank (similar to today's water heaters you find in your basement, but only about a foot in diameter). There was a place to put the wood in right uner it. When the water was hot we filled the bath. The tank kept filled up and kept heating as the wood burned. Great baths, never this much wasted wood. Was too young to remember the other details of it.
A Czech friend of mine did something similar but had done it with a small above ground swimming pool and the water was circulating through the pools Pump . The coil of copper pipe were in the fire box of his home made smoker . So while waiting for freshly smoked meat and cheese we had a pool party in winter . Czechneck engineering was my comment !
freddy c velki didinki
Czechneck! LMAO instant classic.
A friend did that with a bigger tub for 2. She set it on the ground, filled it with water, dug a small hole at one end and built a very small fire in the hole. Worked great.
Why not add a valve to stop the circulation of the water. That way you can "control" the temperature of the water by reopening and closing the valve.
I thought about this and will test it but was worried that the coils would get too hot.
that's not the worst concern, if someone tries to isolate the coil trough valves the water inside it would transform into steam and make the coil explode! it could work if you drain the coil or move it out of the fire trough flexible tubing
you need to keep water moving through the coil, i use a similar coil on my home built maple syrup evaporator , great job on this - eric.
you can make the coil exploit because of the increasing pressure of the water vapor.
You could also add a pressure relief valve.
Very interesting! Everyone on youtube has inspired us to start our own homesteading channel. One day I will have a hot tub!
This is a great idea, I will be buying one to do the same. I was wondering, is it okay to use sea salt or will it corrode the tub? Also, will it leach lead?
I was living off the land on Maui in 1976. When invited up to Haiku to stay in a reconditioned chicken shack I discovered the fudo tub. Japanese by design, it was a ferro cement vessel with copper sheeting on the bottom. You could hack up some wood with a cane knife and start a fire right under it. It also had a big hollowed out bamboo cane, on a swivel, to emit overly hot water and a tap to add cool. After camping on the beach and up in the jungle, all my aches and pains were gone in about 15 minutes.
My favorite part was the chicken running around. haha they looked soo cute ! ..but yeah that was awesome
they're one of our adorable animal helpers :)
my grandpa had something similar in his backyard and always wanted to recreate it. thank you so much.
i dont know why but i found the chickens pecking at the gravel very funny
Simple science. Effective. Great for off grid. A drain valve on the tub would turn it into a heated bath tub (using a smaller tub). The coil heating system has several other possibilities too.
Try insulating the tub.
You can also create an inclosure for the fire and extend a chimney
increase the amount of pipe exposed to the fire and insulate the rest
good idea!
That's exactly what I was thinking. I nice cedar enclosure for the tub and a clay chiminea for the fire. They burn a lot longer so you would get a lot more time out of the firewood and safer in windy conditions. This way you could close the door to dampen the fire to turn down the heat. But the basic concept of using the copper tubing is really the heart of the idea. Fun I idea to develop further.
Thanks for doing it in fast motion, saves a lot of time. I don't have 'unlimited'' data or time. Thanks again.
Pretty cool man!
thanks! love your projects!
DIY Creators I am subscribed to both you guys 😁😁😁 you both have awesome projects keep up the great work👍👍👍
Pretty cool huh
I love it when i see you tubers from the bay area
Maybe you can add a small water pump so it can recirculate way faster?
yes! good idea
You probably will need a temperature gough, so you don't crash a water pump.
Евгений Baltmaster Let the pump Pump the water to the coil, then the pump pumps colder water.
At my friends cabin there is a regular fiberglass hot tub and have the copper coil/wood fire as the heat source. Works great.
Put the copper coil inside something like a rocket stove made out of an old propane tank or old hot water heater. Maybe even coat the inside of tub with porcelain and enclose outside of tank with wooden box to help insulate tub. Maybe even sit the tank inside a wooden box and leave a couple inches on all side and then fill with spray foam?
good ideas!
This is an awesome proof of koncept. Right on man.
Aaawww he is so sweet to the chicken. My kind of man right here!!
Hey Jim BOB. This man here done showed us how to make a hillbillie hot, well hell cletus, let's get to it
Dig a hole underneath the tank, fill it up with firewood and that's it!!
the metal of the tub would conduct heat differently than the water
I did the same. It's just like heating a pot on the stove, only scaled up. Except I raised the tub on old steel car rims. I could have cooked a stew for the whole neighborhood, it was that effective.
hhhhh
*****
My tub had a valve on the end. All I had to was open it and wait a minute or 2. Empty tub. (and fire totally extinguished).
Double Dare Fan
that
sounds
delicious
Genuine question. Every time you use the tub, do you refill it each time? Or do you leave the water in after each use to refrain from using too much water?
I love this, it's like luxury in a simpler time. Beautiful😘
I'm wondering if you could also buy a slightly larger stock tank and put one inside the other and fill the gap with expanding foam to insulate it. That might also make the whole thing more efficient.
immortalized chickens - amazing :D
What a great video! Very clever, well filmed.
I used the flux capacitor from my Dad’s old DeLorean to help pump the water faster. Now it’s November 2018.Does anyone know how to get me back?
You could have packed the coils closer together and implemented them in a concrete rocket stove which warms the water way faster and is much more fuel efficient. (you could build one even with simple clay) Put the stove and the pile of wood within arms reach and u don't have go out the tube to keep the fire going.
I have no clue what types of tanks u have over there in your country, but here we have often the same type of tanks just in different sizes.
So to keep the water nice and warm even a long time after the fire was put down, I would have bought 2 tanks one a bit bigger than the other and put them in each other with a layer of foam isolation between them. Like a thermos can.
It doesn't have to be 2 tanks. Just put something around the tube that isolates enough heat to keep the water warm/hot. (sheets of scrap wood or simply hay wood even do it)
And at last, if the double tank is too expensive, I would put a lid on top of the rocket stove with which I could change the size of the top opening, so I could regulate the amount of airflow so I could regulate indirectly the heat in the oven.
With this I don't need to put the fire out, it could just keep going on a very low heat. And even if it's too hot I could just close the lid completely to put the fire out.
The best part of this video were the chickens
yes, they're pretty awesome!
no, It was his getting his shit off, hahahaha JK
I like how they pecked at the gravel for a nanosecond. :)
BOCK BOCK
Linda FG gimmie some money
omg your chickens are so supportive!
now add onions, carrots, some herbs...........
We use concrete edging around the fire so that it's more like a firepit. This holds the heat and is safer, especially on a windy day. The tub doesn't stay warm enough in colder weather - some type of insulation is needed.
Iron rods and copper tube... bad combination. Sureley corrosion will start accelerated by heat transmission.
I'm in the midst of building a cabin (We've been hampered by bad weather felling trees and just about every weather mishap you can imagine) the cabin has a shower/toilet room but I think that this idea would be great after a day of freezing in Scotland. ..I think I would build an outhouse with access from the cabin and perhaps fit one of those home made propane tank woodstoves with the coils...I reckon that would keep the outhouse and the water nice and warm. ..I think this is a fantastic idea. .Thanks x
seems this would be good for an off-grid situation.
Is there any way to adapt this basic concept into a pre-existing in-ground spa?
Interesting build. If I do something like this, I will probably build a rocket stove and could the copper around it. I think the rocket stove may be a little more efficient than an open fire.
i agree! will try it
Did a rocket stove but you have to constantly ad wood . It's easter to do a burn barrel stove and let er burn .
Excellent proof of concept, refinements to come.
That's a cool idea, Ben. Nice one.
thanks Sean!
Awesome! I'd probably end up using a lot more tubing in a chambers, like a boiler tank uses, or an old lead-free radiator (or a few stacked) to gather much more of the heat. But awesome start! Or... heat the tub directly underneath with a skirt and have some smooth layer shielding the user from the floor but will let water flow around under it. 😊
I think more coils and a tighter spiral would also increase efficiency.
Cool video. Good naration and speed. Your suggestions at the end I totally agree with. I would like to suggest some of mine. I dont know how much you want to upgrade but here goes. First I would definitely change the top water attachment to a metal or both. Second for sure I would insulat the tub.This would reduce heat time more that enlarging the copper tubbibg. But still enlarge it. Add something to protect the head from the cold. Some where to put a towel. I have other idea but don't know how upscale you want to go.
you looked much more attractive in the video thumbnail.
J. M. Pérez XD lol
Seriously underrated comment.
That's called marketing .....lol
Good intent.
You need to isolate the copper tubing from the steel supports otherwise galvanization will occur and the tubing will disintegrate where the two unlike metals are in contact with each other.
Love how you just have chickens roaming around in these videos
great video. a stove inclosure will defintely be the way to go. Wondering what improvements could me made for heat exchange? Is copper tubing the best tubing for the task? Your project just really has my mind working overtime. I have wanted to do a variation of your tub for a long time. thanks again.
You should make a rocket stove for this. It's way more efficient on wood.
Michael Criswell I agree, a rocket stove would be the more effective way to go and it would look awesome.
I was thinking the same thing. I'd build it up so you add the sticks(not logs) right at the edge, so you can feed it while in it.
I've seen sweet pizza ovens using a rocket stove to heat it instead of the standard bonfire. They got it to +900°F in 30 minutes instead of 2 hours.
Oh- and no smoke! (if built like a true rocket stove)
In 1967 my father took me on one of his yearly hunting vacations for the 1st time, elk hunting in eastern Oregon. Him and 5 of his buddies had been doing this for many years. Get away from the wives, drink, tell lies, shoot guns, and usually fill the freezer with meat of one kind of another, plus the hides, feathers, leather, eye teeth, antlers... even deer leg tendons dried and scraped and used as a toothpick. I never liked the killing but did use everything that nature and my dad provided. These guys didn't do it to prove they were tough or for attention, quite the contrary. They didn't rough it one bit. There was a campfire going 24/7 at camp, sitting next to it was a 30 gal. aluminum pot with handles and a lid. My dad had tapped the pot and mounted brass hardware so a 4' long 3/4 inch copper loop could be mounted and placed in the fire. The pot was always being refilled and kept on the edge of being too hot to use to wash, in other words... perfect. I like your concept with a couple of modifications. I think the hot (exit) end should be under the water surface it still circulates just fine. And, your plan doesn't take into account the inevitable tsunami that is going to occur when things turn... frisky? A drain into a nearby water feature that can filter grey water would be nice and the chicken wouldn't mind at all. Design a system that feeds pellets into a brick chamber holding the copper tube and save a ton of wood. Good job.
Now build a robot that puts wood in the fire automatically!
I live in a rural area on 17 acres, this would be awesome no neighbors around perfectly peaceful
Did you insure yourself from having the copper stolen? Here in Italy it gets stolen from the railway infrastructures as if it were Gold.
Lorenzo Notarianni that's about €60-100 max worth of copper here
I like it..
Does the pipe melts with the heat of the fire..?
Are you going to make these improvements ? I live in AZ so there is no sense in making a hot tub here lol.
yes, the next time i am out there.
Andres Rodriguez My wife and I are considering moving to AZ (Prescott or Prescott valley) from Southern California. Any advice? Opinion?
did that myself many years ago with an above ground pool. wrapped copper around a 20 gallon tank, which was the firebox and shoved it into a 55 gal drum to contain the heat.
I like that way that he use the chicken to make some art then throw the chicken away!XD
I like it really cool or rather hot. I get a bit fed up with people saying you should do this you should do that that's not the right way. excellent job
....make a clay stove around the existing copper coil. Your efficiency on wood burning and temperature will rise dramatically.
In the 80's when I worked on harbor tugs, some of the boats had what looked like wood burning stove's that ran on diesel oil. On the side with the burner there was a single coil of copper that led to a probably 15 gal tank on the opposite side of the bulkhead and the same set up with just convection to circulate the water. On long days you'd have to be careful because the hot water coming out of the tap would be hot enough to scald you.
you gained a sub with this project !
pink foam underneath, and spread in/out, say you stove take vertical 33gal barrel wood stove, put lg coppipe on bottom of the tank, any valve to reg flow goes this side then pipe gets slightly smaller, could add find to pickup more heat, or just add flame with chimney under tube(mini-rocket stove to bring up 180gals first GL good stuff, I own/made one of these
dude you look good #nohomo
😂😂😂
starting to think he did all that just to have an excuse to take his shirt off. #notevenmad
Daniel sin Carne that's how all start
Unless you happen to live off the grid and what a DIY Hot tub for the occasional bath? However judging from your comment you've only had to turn your wrist to get this satisfaction. Some people like to escape the dependence of the system and work a little for this sort of thing.
Pablo Clavo no homo means guaranteed homo XD
I'd say to insulate the the tub to retain the heat also..Maybe sand or vermiculite since it's light.. Great vid and thanks for sharing the knowledge !!
Can't wait for your "Concrete toilet" video.
Did you tried canging the sides of coil. Like the top output of the coil head to the bottom of the tub? I think it would make the heating process more efficient.
Now make a comfortable seat for the hot tub.
yes! i was thinking of a tropical hard wood slatted seat.
HomeMadeModern or maybe someting softer that goes under your back, and bubles?
A back rest would be a bonus
I built one few years back (used 12 volt solar pump) more coils, and found that soot built up a crust around the coils over time, they get less and less effective, to fix this I wrapped coils around barrel letting the barrel get dirty then the coils.. barrel doesn't build up like the copper coils.. don't know if its the material or the water cooling the soot forming the crust. but does not form on barrel... I also added a drain plug to clean out tub.