I have watched lots of these rocket stove videos....yours is the simplest and the best. An excellent job and maybe we should all be building a few of these to hand out to neighbours with a garden demo to and written instructions for when 'they' cut off our electricity n gas supplies. Or for homeless/ unemployed. Welcome to 2021, everyone. Hang on to your hats...
Just came across this video, great job. I am always looking for different ways to cook, boil water for tea etc when I am at my off grid cabin. I have a little tip to share with you, it will save a lot of scouring when it comes time to clean up the soot off the pot. Before you start cooking, while you are getting the stove going, make a lather of hand soap and coat the bottom and sides of the pot with the lather. Let it dry for a bit if you have time. Then just go ahead and cook as you would normally do. When it is time to clean the pot the soot will pretty much "float" off and your clean up efforts will be simple. Try it if you don't believe me, leave a bare spot where there is no soap lather and see the difference when you wash up.Take care and stay safe everyone, Sandie from Ontario Canada.
Awesome build man, as someone who lives in an area in the northeast that loses power a lot I’ve been looking into something like this that can provide heat and cooking without needing gas. I live in the woods so I’ve got that as fuel to spare.
I have a similar stove made out of IKEA stainless utensils strainer. It's very light and very efficient when in comes to cooking. It works on twigs and small sticks and as the flame flows directly to the bottom of your vessel it takes little time and very little fuel to cook whatever you want. I keep mine inside of my camping pot. Best thing ever.
Great video, my Grandpa taught me how to make one of these when I was a kid. A little suggestion I'll add, is when you make your chimney can, also cut 8 tabs in it, fold 4 down in a cross pattern, put your lid on, then fold the other 4 tabs down. That way your chimney and lid become one and are less likely to loose it.
Informative in a simple and concise format. I made one identical to yours but I didn't use the aluminum tape. Once the plaster of Parid hardened, it actually covered the gap. Thank you.
OK, like that, it's the same concept of Ghillie kettles. which Welsh miners used. I have one from my G-pa, and have used it on hunting/fishing trips.Mainly used to warm water, soup, stew. Only need a little newspaper, given the news now a days, probably the best use for it LOL. Liked your Vid, well done. I may have used some of the expanded mesh for the can instead of the small board, but yours still worked. Thx
I was pretty skeptical that any of this would even be worth watching let alone worth building... However, this was rather informative. A solid one-day project. Great for the kids. Useful end product. 💯
This can also be used for hot water shower. Extend the length of the flue. Put a coil of copper pipe around it. Connect a hose to the pipe at the top to pump cold water in. Connect a hose at the bottom with enough length to have a shower. Pump water fast warm shower. Pump water slow hot shower. Pretty much instant hot water. The longer the copper pipe the more hot water.
@@daphneraven6745 100%. My father in law had a fire with a copper 50 litre container. He put a 6metre, 20feet, copper coil half inch copper pipe in the copper bucket. Connected at both ends with town water garden hose . One end to shower , one end to tap. When the water was hot in the copper bucket he could run continuous hot water as long as the fire was going. Endless supply hot water. My way I described will do the same thing but probably simpler.
Thanks for an excellent video, and build. The addition of plaster, sand, perlite insulation would add weight & stability to the stove. Your presentation was both clear and detailed... thanks mate.
I think we can put something to dry, a kind of fish, meat and yam instead of ruble when the things are abandoned. I have saved the video, I run the environment club! Thanks so much
Andrew, you are the dude! Fantastic, no bricks to carry around, much lighter in weight, great recycling. Waiting to see how it works. Even though I have none of those tools, if I did(and they are pretty basic) I feel that a little old lady with the moral support of her dog(gotta have a dog, very supportive) could actually do this on her own. Hint:For easier cleaning of pony soothed on some liquid dish soap on the bottom and part way up the sides before using. Black ick is much more easily removed. Thanks for blogging that great idea! Jane from Connecticut and her wacky sidekick, Lola, the Boston Terrier
Here's very helpful info regarding this type and a larger version i've made. i made quite a few of the same type of rocket stove as in this video , and used them for cooking my food almost always twice a day every day for several years ; and i took good care of them and i kept them out of the rains and i found that the fire(s) destroys the metal inner tubes in 6 months. And for evening meals, the coffee can size was problematic because after cooking a pot of beans and then doing more cooking frying food in a pan / skillet that would get interrupted because the ash builds up in the can and must be raked out so the air can flow , but raking out the ash also removes the coals too which are igniting the wood being fed in , and so the fire must be started all over again. i solved the problem by making a larger version by using an empty maple syrup drum / can which is made for and used for bulk dispensing at health food stores. i obtained for several for free after the store had dispensed all of the maple syrup that was inside the drum and threw it away: The metal drum measures approximately 17 inches high and 13 inches diameter. i cut the can about an inch or so down from the to and turned the cut out end over and dropped it into the rest of the can : the flare of the can produced a fit perfect snug and tight in place mating them together securely. For the inner pipes, cans the size of around 36-42 oz. (i say around that because i am not sure what the volume of the cans were now but the type that whole round pineapple slices come in : about a 4-inch diameter. The factory hole in top of can for it's pop-out pour spout i simply kept covered over with a small square of thin metal. And i used a small metal grate with legs to sit within the can head over the fire tube, formed of round metal rods about the same diameter as one found on shelves in ovens. That stove was most excellent. Hand tools are all one needs in order to make these stoves : a can-opener, a hammer and screwdriver (to create a hole to get the tin snips into), and a pair of slightly angled tin snips to cut the holes (Compound Action Tin Snips.)
@@Дмитрий-о5ж4у You are welcome! /Пожалуйста! Из-за вашего доброго слова, и увидев 60 лайков, я просто отредактировал его, чтобы добавить больше деталей и уточнить его.
@@flowerchild777 thank you, Angela. i just saw your word of appreciation. And edited refining what i put and added more detailed instructions about constructing the larger rocket stove.
Well I just love this. I have a Dremel and lots of cans. Gonna make myself one now for my campfire coffee pot. Thank you so much for taking the time to make this video.
Great video! I used one of these while living in the mountains in Oregon for a few months and I've wanted to make one since. The one I used had rocks for insulation, and I believe the inner chamber/can was one of the smaller metal coffee cans which allowed for more room for more coals. To start our fires in them we would bunch up a group of small twigs, light them on fire then drop them into the top chamber. Then we would feed the fire from the side as you did here. We also used a billows to get the fire even hotter, which would bring water to a boil in about a minute. While these don't last forever it's definitely a good thing to have on hand in an emergency. Liquid or gas fuel runs out and can be hard to find at times of natural disasters. Sticks however are plentiful and free!
I really enjoyed watching this how to video. You explained the construction very nicely for us older (young) ladies, lol. If the need does arise I too want the knowhow to make life a bit easier. Thank you so much.
I wish I had an intelligent resourceful creative kid like you! This video is excellent in every way possible! Thanks for not playing some insane crazy annoying background music. How much would it cost me to have you make me one of these?
42 years? I think that's the year we switched to gas...we lived in the country and collected rubber branches from our small area, very convenient. Only think was starting the fire...puffing and blowing away, sometimes I almost felt faint. Cooking rice on firewood was easier than gas stove. Hate it whwn the power goes off. Have a great new year 2024...today is the first day
This video is an example of an EXCELLENT Filmed Video... I couldn't have the sound on... I had to mute it and I still knew what was going on!!!! GREAT Video... Thank YOU so much for sharing this.
Thank you just what I needed because February in Texas with an ice storm 7 days no food no heat no electric no water couldn't flush the toilet at least now I have a way I can eat thank you bless you
I love it .......watched a few other videos and they dropped the wood down throught the top with the kindling or twigs etc. Going to build this one soon as I can get a coffee can off someone.Thanks for sharing Andrew.
I learned how to make one of these in Boy Scouts. Using a #10 can, a Tuna can, some cardboard, and parafin. The only tool needed is one of those old triangular punch can openers- to puncture a ring of vents in the side of the can just below the rim. The flat bottom of the #10 can is your cooking surface- or you can set a pot/pan on it. The tuna can holds the parrafin soaked cardboard- which burns nice and steady like a candle. Best part- it's waterproof!
It's insane the type of things we watch 😂 I'm probably never going to need to use this information but yet I'm sitting here fully indulged. Gotta love the tube
Excellent video. Thx for speeding the video up during the drilling, cutting, and other parts. That said: FYI, building a wood fire consists of tender, kindling, and fuel wood...notwithstanding the oxygen (that goes without saying :-) Nonetheless, thanks for sharing your design.
If you bend the pointy Corners downwards on your steel grate on the top it will stay in place when you're putting your pots or pans on or off... great video. Great idea. I am definitely going to build one of these for my cabin up north in case the power goes out.. the advantage of having one ready to go is that it takes very little dry wood to cook food or generate Heat...
Great job. I'm researching ways to have a hot lunch during winter warm-day fishing excursions, and this isn't perfect for that but anything ingenious is fun, so bravo. I live near a national park that allows charcoal fires only in provided grills, and a coffee can could be a good small chimney for lighting the coals. Got a drill and a Dremel, coffee can and coat hanger and we're in business.
Remember to empty the ash from the burned sticks after you cook or when it accumulates in the bottom of the chimney. You can add more sticks in the side can or from the top.
i would have cut more of the mesh for that metal piece the fuel sits on. with the holes there would be plenty of air. awesome design thanks for sharing
Good little Stove, maybe solder or braze the cans together and use 3/4" lava rock for the filler . Kinda use it as a heater as well as a stove also ! Just needs a door and a air intake control and you'll be good
Metal coffee cans are getting rather difficult to find. Every hardware and craft store still has unused paint cans. Popsicle or paint stirring sticks coated lightly in Vaseline are great for quickly starting a fire if all that is available laying around is damp. For those who might want to go for a hike and have hot lunch in the remote wilderness, can easily get the total weight down to about 2-3 pounds by using warm soapy water with perlite, plaster, and pumice. The air bubbles displace the solids and add insulating value without reducing strength. Also, consider having a thin layer of insulation beneath the burn chamber (inside can). This will extend the life of the outer can from heat cycle wear after repeated usage and reduce the risk of burning any surface that the stove is resting on. These work so much better than any of the specialty portable fuel canister camping stoves for heating up a full pot of water to make coffee or a decent backpacking meal for a group of people.
Great idea....great little project for any Girl Guide unit....am going to try this with our great niece and nephew......my husband loved these projects.
I'm going to make me one of these :). Another tip that's a great fuel to use is to keep all of your junk mail and when you've collected a box full, get them damp with a spray bottle of water, roll them up tight and clamp them with rubber bands, bread ties, string (anything that will burn) and then set them out to dry. Makes great "sticks" or for a regular camp fire, make larger ones the size of small logs. They last a pretty long time too!!
Good video. I see a lot of comments about using this when the electricity goes down. I’d like to remind everyone to make it now while you still have electricity for all of the tools. 😁
Me and my little buddy'Tiger'were making these things in Okinawa when we were five years old.Tiger got the idea from his daddy who was a air force pilot and must have learned to make a stove out of a coffee can in survival school circa 1962.We would sneak off with hot dogs and matches and cook them on the stove using hobu grass for fuel.That is till later tiger and his brother started the island on fire and got "Smitty" in hot water with the Air forse brass for nearly burning down the neighborhood.Those were the days!Nothing like the smell of burning grass and roasting hotdogs!!To heck with galvanized poisoning we cooked directly on the coffee can.We survived.Little did we know their were 1400 nukes on the island and that the island had become ground zero.The Okinawans didn't know it either.They found out later.Japan told them.
Pretty good work, easy explanation and easy to understand but more important thing is that use of cans which normally people put it in the dumpster , great work, congratulations
Nice video and clear instruction.... i am born and raise in 3rd world country and this is nothing new. I remember using this stuff when i was little until one day proprane tank took over of my grandma's kitchen. But yes this is the coolest now 🤗
People still think my country is 3rd world...sometimes I think it's subjective. We have everything advanced countries have, but maybe less and not as fancy. Btw, still enjoy the woodstove cooking. I collected our own wood fod cooking.
A solid piece of metal actually works better, as the sticks slide in on it as the ends burn up. Also you want that air to be sucked underneath the solid metal, and to come up inside the chimney. Not to cause a fire in the feed tunnel, as happened at the start. The way to get the fire drawing straight up the chimney immediately, is to sit another open ended can on top of the chimney when lighting the fire. The higher the chimney, the better the hot air rises. As the fuel and air are not very hot to begin with, increasing the height of the chimney temporarily, gives a much better burn. Use tongs or gloves to lift the extra can off when the fire starts roaring!
Just saw it. Looks good! Just one comment: you should have used the remaining bit of grid instead of sheet metal for the raiser of the fuel - it would give you much better air intake.
homie slapped cans together...burned paper in it and people in the comments are like.. wow what a great job! ive watched alot of these videos and yours is the best LOL who watches this genre of video on youtube.. i feel like i stumbled on some freaky cult obsessed with fires in cans LMAO..2021 and i got RECOMMENDED this video somehow AAAAND it has 5 million views, what happened to humans, did we downgrade holy smokes
Then you would NOT have a Rocket Stove. That angle would, completely, alter the air intake flow. He's making a homemade Rocket Stove. Not a handy standard burner.you can slowly cook on.
Another good fire starter is to use pinecones. I think if you used your grate on top for the metal piece that sits under the kindling, it might work even better! Love this idea & video! Thank you 😊
Claro que si. Una muy buena idea para tener mi estufa. Tan fácil... Gracias por compartir tus ideas y consejos. Recibe un fuerte abrazo desde Irapuato Guanajuato México
Good use of used cans. The grill that supports the wood in the firebox is better if its not a solid piece of metal. The air movement should get all around the wood so it draws even better. You could use some more of that expanded metal you used for the top trivet. Or finer expanded metal that's maybe stronger so it can handle more heat. The other thing is to turn the small extender piece of inside chimney up the other way so the cut edge is down and not a safety issue. 1kg Coffee comes in a tin can. Or go to a cafe or restaurant and ask for their size A10 tin cans that many food stuffs come in for the catering trade.
Turn the stove "into the wind", coat the underside of the pot with dish washing liquid, the black soot won't stick to it, rinses off clean! You're welcome. Good stove, good idea!
will try that since we are under enhance community quarantine and there's no way i could buy butane gas.. got plenty of dried leaves and sucks from our tree 😍👍🏻
Try tracing the can on a piece of paper and then use that paper to make the hole. It makes a tighter better hole for the smaller can. Also, if you use a can opener to make the holes on the outer can, it could help with the support of the lid.
That was very interest, Andrew. Thank you for sharing. I have to confess, though, what made me nervous were the combustible items near your rocket stove. Hopefully, those who try this at home will follow the same guidelines as should be an open grill, and that is to keep it at least six feet away from any structure or combustible items nearby. Just a word of caution. Just sayin' because sometimes we can get so absorbed in the project itself, we can forget about what's most important...our safety and the safety of others.
A mixture of waterglass and perlite gives a ok kind of refractory, by the way. The problem with burning wood and plants is that it makes corrosive fumes and there is little to none material which can resist for long. Doesn't matter, because this is how the world works. Refraktories are a kind of materials which are consumed during the process. For instance to make a car consums 2000 kilograms of refractory materials. They just dissolve into the molten glass which is processed in the furnace. By implementing a good refractory covering the stove can be made in away so it last for very long. I really like the video!
YOU, SIR, are an EXCELLENT TEACHER!!! Your language is clear & concise. You are obviously quite an intelligent young man with a well thought out plan. Camera angles, lighting, audio quality ALL EXCELLENT. Thank you for taking an extra moment and carefully showing each step in depth. And, may I add... THANK YOU VERY MUCH for NOT playing ridiculously loud & trance-like music in the background. Yo!*ur parents must be very proud of you!!! Thank you for sharing, and inspiring me, and literally giving me the courage to *think I can!* (Is there a pun in there? LOL ) I have subbed & liked. Keep the great content coming :-D God bless you!!!
Hi , so nice,, we remember our days with such stove,in India in 80's, its called chulla in India, it was in every house,, now also we find in villages in India,,
I've been building these for a while now" They are the Greatest thing since Apple pie.!! Here's a little Tip" from an aged pro" The space between the wall's is where you will get you're longest time, Running, Heat,!! Or Not.!! SO, think it through good before adding the insulation.!! That's why Some tiny wood and small rocket stoves" pass OR Fial." The Best thing I've found to use for this Space is ( used lava Rock's) like can be Baught for a gas grill, there used to keep the gas heat more even inside a grill, then a little concreteTo fill in the spaces between them. That's "my Secret" to my different types of Heaters" putting out "Good Heat all most all night Long.!! So, maybe I should share my technique in a utube video.??? lolol
@@TheRoadDawg HEY" THANKS!! I MEAN IT,!! THANK YOU MY FRIEND.!! But if you don't mind I will meantion you're one of the people who incoraged Me, to Show everyone what I have discovered.!! I not only have newer version of the "Rocket stoves" But I also have figured out Some add on's that not only heat water, but do a lot more, ACTUALLY, My add-ons" are what I've been working on for SO"SO" LONG.!! I have good news, for every one who follows my channel.!! I will be "OPEN SOURCEING" Everything I have invented" as an add-on, to My Version of the Rocket Stove.,!!! I'm not gonna ask for $$ For Something that will help people, all over the world 🌎!!!!
@@TheRoadDawg Oh, P.S. I wanted to say" that I've had other's say basically the same thing as well, to me. Also" I'm not only going to focase on the Rocket stoves, I've been working on a way to power a Home/RV/Camper, Or pretty much any other place that we can call home" for any length of time.!! The good NEWS is: I've REALLY CRACKED IT. Watch for my 1st, video.!! I'm gonna be Open Sorceing Anything I've Discovered,.!!!
Instead of taping the cans, integrate tabs into the cuts instead of totally cutting out and pop rivet or screw together. Great idea for boiling a billy quickly:-)
I have watched lots of these rocket stove videos....yours is the simplest and the best. An excellent job and maybe we should all be building a few of these to hand out to neighbours with a garden demo to and written instructions for when 'they' cut off our electricity n gas supplies. Or for homeless/ unemployed. Welcome to 2021, everyone. Hang on to your hats...
I am homeless, I will be making lots of these, because fucking everything gets stolen from me.
@@FringeWizard2 Sorry for the inherent evil of man. This is a good stove. There are other stoves. Good Luck
@@FringeWizard2 u may be able to sale them
Ah, "they". The eternal enemy of the people.
@@terrysmith7956
Just came across this video, great job. I am always looking for different ways to cook, boil water for tea etc when I am at my off grid cabin. I have a little tip to share with you, it will save a lot of scouring when it comes time to clean up the soot off the pot. Before you start cooking, while you are getting the stove going, make a lather of hand soap and coat the bottom and sides of the pot with the lather. Let it dry for a bit if you have time. Then just go ahead and cook as you would normally do. When it is time to clean the pot the soot will pretty much "float" off and your clean up efforts will be simple. Try it if you don't believe me, leave a bare spot where there is no soap lather and see the difference when you wash up.Take care and stay safe everyone, Sandie from Ontario Canada.
We do that as well.
Thanks for the tip
Very informative. O love it.
thank you for the tip. i will definitely try it.
Ah wonderful tip! Thank you so much!
Love this! Great little project to do with your young teen kids.
Teaching alternative ways to cook when utilities are out.
Awesome build man, as someone who lives in an area in the northeast that loses power a lot I’ve been looking into something like this that can provide heat and cooking without needing gas. I live in the woods so I’ve got that as fuel to spare.
I have a similar stove made out of IKEA stainless utensils strainer. It's very light and very efficient when in comes to cooking. It works on twigs and small sticks and as the flame flows directly to the bottom of your vessel it takes little time and very little fuel to cook whatever you want. I keep mine inside of my camping pot. Best thing ever.
Great idea...i shud go out and get that Ikea thingy...and sturdy too. Thanks for the video...happy new year everyone
You are a good teacher. Very calm and good at explaining. Thank U!
Great video, my Grandpa taught me how to make one of these when I was a kid. A little suggestion I'll add, is when you make your chimney can, also cut 8 tabs in it, fold 4 down in a cross pattern, put your lid on, then fold the other 4 tabs down. That way your chimney and lid become one and are less likely to loose it.
من 7 سنين هيدا الفيديو و أنا الآن شفته و كم نحنا بحاجة لهالاختراع بهالأيام وخصوصي بالظروف اللي عمنمروء فيها ببلدنا 🇱🇧👌🏻👍🏻
Informative in a simple and concise format. I made one identical to yours but I didn't use the aluminum tape. Once the plaster of Parid hardened, it actually covered the gap.
Thank you.
OK, like that, it's the same concept of Ghillie kettles. which Welsh miners used. I have one from my G-pa, and have used it on hunting/fishing trips.Mainly used to warm water, soup, stew. Only need a little newspaper, given the news now a days, probably the best use for it LOL.
Liked your Vid, well done. I may have used some of the expanded mesh for the can instead of the small board, but yours still worked. Thx
This was great. I’ve watched a lot of these and this one was just great -good design, great explanation, and you showed everything clearly.
Perfect teaching. Thank you. People like you are what humanity needs. You are a giver; parasite people need learning this virtue! Blessings ‼️
Indeed.
I was pretty skeptical that any of this would even be worth watching let alone worth building...
However, this was rather informative. A solid one-day project. Great for the kids. Useful end product. 💯
This can also be used for hot water shower.
Extend the length of the flue.
Put a coil of copper pipe around it.
Connect a hose to the pipe at the top to pump cold water in.
Connect a hose at the bottom with enough length to have a shower.
Pump water fast warm shower.
Pump water slow hot shower.
Pretty much instant hot water.
The longer the copper pipe the more hot water.
@@rayblazejko6908 I've seen this done with an outdoor soaker tub. I mean, yes, clearly cheaper than a hot tub, but it's one hell of a setup process.
Ray Blazejko: I was just wondering about whether this very modification would work; Tyvk!
@@daphneraven6745 100%. My father in law had a fire with a copper 50 litre container. He put a 6metre, 20feet, copper coil half inch copper pipe in the copper bucket. Connected at both ends with town water garden hose . One end to shower , one end to tap. When the water was hot in the copper bucket he could run continuous hot water as long as the fire was going. Endless supply hot water. My way I described will do the same thing but probably simpler.
Ray Blazejko : Thank you for the benefit of your experience. In a pinch, it really helps to have smart, prepared people around!
Thanks for an excellent video, and build. The addition of plaster, sand, perlite insulation would add weight & stability to the stove. Your presentation was both clear and detailed... thanks mate.
I think we can put something to dry, a kind of fish, meat and yam instead of ruble when the things are abandoned.
I have saved the video, I run the environment club!
Thanks so much
Andrew, you are the dude!
Fantastic, no bricks to carry around, much lighter in weight, great recycling.
Waiting to see how it works. Even though I have none of those tools, if I did(and they are pretty basic)
I feel that a little old lady with the moral support of her dog(gotta have a dog, very supportive) could actually do this on her own.
Hint:For easier cleaning of pony soothed on some liquid dish soap on the bottom and part way up the sides before using. Black ick is much more easily removed.
Thanks for blogging that great idea!
Jane from Connecticut and her wacky sidekick, Lola, the Boston Terrier
LOL😬I would be that “little old lady” that you speak of💕 I will be making one of these with me grandson👍🏻
@@Nanalovesherbabies Another "little old lady" here with 2 cute little bratty kitties!
Have a happy new year Jane, 1st day of 2024...and hope you still have Lola helping you👍
Here's very helpful info regarding this type and a larger version i've made. i made quite a few of the same type of rocket stove as in this video , and used them for cooking my food almost always twice a day every day for several years ; and i took good care of them and i kept them out of the rains and i found that the fire(s) destroys the metal inner tubes in 6 months. And for evening meals, the coffee can size was problematic because after cooking a pot of beans and then doing more cooking frying food in a pan / skillet that would get interrupted because the ash builds up in the can and must be raked out so the air can flow , but raking out the ash also removes the coals too which are igniting the wood being fed in , and so the fire must be started all over again. i solved the problem by making a larger version by using an empty maple syrup drum / can which is made for and used for bulk dispensing at health food stores. i obtained for several for free after the store had dispensed all of the maple syrup that was inside the drum and threw it away: The metal drum measures approximately 17 inches high and 13 inches diameter. i cut the can about an inch or so down from the to and turned the cut out end over and dropped it into the rest of the can : the flare of the can produced a fit perfect snug and tight in place mating them together securely. For the inner pipes, cans the size of around 36-42 oz. (i say around that because i am not sure what the volume of the cans were now but the type that whole round pineapple slices come in : about a 4-inch diameter. The factory hole in top of can for it's pop-out pour spout i simply kept covered over with a small square of thin metal. And i used a small metal grate with legs to sit within the can head over the fire tube, formed of round metal rods about the same diameter as one found on shelves in ovens. That stove was most excellent. Hand tools are all one needs in order to make these stoves : a can-opener, a hammer and screwdriver (to create a hole to get the tin snips into), and a pair of slightly angled tin snips to cut the holes (Compound Action Tin Snips.)
Thank you. This information will definitely come in handy for a family of 8🙃 Blessings to you, sir
Thank you, Ted! Really usefull info about practice!
@@Дмитрий-о5ж4у You are welcome! /Пожалуйста! Из-за вашего доброго слова, и увидев 60 лайков, я просто отредактировал его, чтобы добавить больше деталей и уточнить его.
@@flowerchild777 thank you, Angela. i just saw your word of appreciation. And edited refining what i put and added more detailed instructions about constructing the larger rocket stove.
Empty metal drum would be good...must go hunting for a suitable one. Thanks for sharing your idea...and this video, great help
What an improvement over the one can method. More stable platform to cook on, without getting burned on the sides. Thanks 😎
Well I just love this. I have a Dremel and lots of cans. Gonna make myself one now for my campfire coffee pot. Thank you so much for taking the time to make this video.
9g4tgi8
It is nice to see creative people recycling stuff in order to save our already depleting environment.
Great video! I used one of these while living in the mountains in Oregon for a few months and I've wanted to make one since. The one I used had rocks for insulation, and I believe the inner chamber/can was one of the smaller metal coffee cans which allowed for more room for more coals. To start our fires in them we would bunch up a group of small twigs, light them on fire then drop them into the top chamber. Then we would feed the fire from the side as you did here. We also used a billows to get the fire even hotter, which would bring water to a boil in about a minute. While these don't last forever it's definitely a good thing to have on hand in an emergency. Liquid or gas fuel runs out and can be hard to find at times of natural disasters. Sticks however are plentiful and free!
I really enjoyed watching this how to video. You explained the construction very nicely for us older (young) ladies, lol. If the need does arise I too want the knowhow to make life a bit easier. Thank you so much.
I ty for the video, I am a woman who realizes we are in THOSE DAYS. Will be making several of these.
I wish I had an intelligent resourceful creative kid like you! This video is excellent in every way possible! Thanks for not playing some insane crazy annoying background music. How much would it cost me to have you make me one of these?
My thought exactly
I think u just want his phone number. Hahaha
I like your designs. I have been cooking on wood stoves in my own house for 42 years.
42 years? I think that's the year we switched to gas...we lived in the country and collected rubber branches from our small area, very convenient. Only think was starting the fire...puffing and blowing away, sometimes I almost felt faint. Cooking rice on firewood was easier than gas stove. Hate it whwn the power goes off.
Have a great new year 2024...today is the first day
This video is an example of an
EXCELLENT Filmed Video...
I couldn't have the sound on... I had to mute it
and I still knew what was going on!!!!
GREAT Video...
Thank YOU so much for sharing this.
7 years ago... how it is needed now! Thank you very much. 💗
Good Job! I like how you notched it were it's in line with your small can so you can see your fire!
Thank you just what I needed because February in Texas with an ice storm 7 days no food no heat no electric no water couldn't flush the toilet at least now I have a way I can eat thank you bless you
3-4 minutes? That is amazing!
I like the fact that it wasn't smoking like crazy. Awesome build. Simply and productive
I love it .......watched a few other videos and they dropped the wood down throught the top with the kindling or twigs etc. Going to build this one soon as I can get a coffee can off someone.Thanks for sharing Andrew.
Hard to find coffee cans like that. They are made with recycled partical paper with tin bottoms now...I bought a large can of pork&beans to make one
I learned how to make one of these in Boy Scouts. Using a #10 can, a Tuna can, some cardboard, and parafin. The only tool needed is one of those old triangular punch can openers- to puncture a ring of vents in the side of the can just below the rim. The flat bottom of the #10 can is your cooking surface- or you can set a pot/pan on it. The tuna can holds the parrafin soaked cardboard- which burns nice and steady like a candle. Best part- it's waterproof!
I just love all of the ideals fir stoves, camping, houses, cooking and etc that I've seen and read about.
Very practical for deep woods camping where youll have an endless fuel supply. Thanks for this video.
I’m so making one of these!!! I’ve got all the “ingredients” was just waiting for a good how to and this was it!! Thanks!!!
It's insane the type of things we watch 😂 I'm probably never going to need to use this information but yet I'm sitting here fully indulged. Gotta love the tube
tito Montanaaa you never know
Life can throw you curve balls! Never say never!
Excellent video. Thx for speeding the video up during the drilling, cutting, and other parts.
That said: FYI, building a wood fire consists of tender, kindling, and fuel wood...notwithstanding the oxygen (that goes without saying :-)
Nonetheless, thanks for sharing your design.
If you bend the pointy Corners downwards on your steel grate on the top it will stay in place when you're putting your pots or pans on or off... great video. Great idea. I am definitely going to build one of these for my cabin up north in case the power goes out.. the advantage of having one ready to go is that it takes very little dry wood to cook food or generate Heat...
Great idea about the pointy ends
A pretty sound design. I think if you used a paint can for the outer cylinder, it would give you a handle you could carry the whole thing with.
Or can put handle on it from old handle from bucket. Like my plastic buckets gandle outasts bucket. I save handles. They come in handy for a lot
Or just poke a couple of holes in each side and use a coat hanger or bailing wire for the handle.
Thank you for the clear, step by step tutorial for those of us that need that extra help
Great job. I'm researching ways to have a hot lunch during winter warm-day fishing excursions, and this isn't perfect for that but anything ingenious is fun, so bravo. I live near a national park that allows charcoal fires only in provided grills, and a coffee can could be a good small chimney for lighting the coals. Got a drill and a Dremel, coffee can and coat hanger and we're in business.
Remember to empty the ash from the burned sticks after you cook or when it accumulates in the bottom of the chimney.
You can add more sticks in the side can or from the top.
i would have cut more of the mesh for that metal piece the fuel sits on. with the holes there would be plenty of air. awesome design thanks for sharing
Thanks for the step by step guide, so cool!
Nothing better than the sound if crackling wood on Christmas morning! I built a similar one, but now I must build this model for camping. 😀
Good little Stove, maybe solder or braze the cans together and use 3/4" lava rock for the filler . Kinda use it as a heater as well as a stove also ! Just needs a door and a air intake control and you'll be good
Great idea!
I was skeptical when the video began , but you earned my respect brother! I'm gonna build one just like it !
Metal coffee cans are getting rather difficult to find.
Every hardware and craft store still has unused paint cans.
Popsicle or paint stirring sticks coated lightly in Vaseline are great for quickly starting a fire if all that is available laying around is damp.
For those who might want to go for a hike and have hot lunch in the remote wilderness, can easily get the total weight down to about 2-3 pounds by using warm soapy water with perlite, plaster, and pumice. The air bubbles displace the solids and add insulating value without reducing strength.
Also, consider having a thin layer of insulation beneath the burn chamber (inside can). This will extend the life of the outer can from heat cycle wear after repeated usage and reduce the risk of burning any surface that the stove is resting on.
These work so much better than any of the specialty portable fuel canister camping stoves for heating up a full pot of water to make coffee or a decent backpacking meal for a group of people.
Excellent project it works.
Great idea....great little project for any Girl Guide unit....am going to try this with our great niece and nephew......my husband loved these projects.
I'm going to make me one of these :). Another tip that's a great fuel to use is to keep all of your junk mail and when you've collected a box full, get them damp with a spray bottle of water, roll them up tight and clamp them with rubber bands, bread ties, string (anything that will burn) and then set them out to dry. Makes great "sticks" or for a regular camp fire, make larger ones the size of small logs. They last a pretty long time too!!
@@danielateresita Nice :)
Very bad
You can do this with newspaper also
used oil with a small cloth is the best fuel and less contamination
MegzeeR u
Good video. I see a lot of comments about using this when the electricity goes down. I’d like to remind everyone to make it now while you still have electricity for all of the tools. 😁
😂
line the firebox with woodstove cement, it'll last longer. just smear it in with your hand. several coats. Stuff is pretty cheap.
I can’t get over how smooth and beautiful the hands look!
Me and my little buddy'Tiger'were making these things in Okinawa when we were five years old.Tiger got the idea from his daddy who was a air force pilot and must have learned to make a stove out of a coffee can in survival school circa 1962.We would sneak off with hot dogs and matches and cook them on the stove using hobu grass for fuel.That is till later tiger and his brother started the island on fire and got "Smitty" in hot water with the Air forse brass for nearly burning down the neighborhood.Those were the days!Nothing like the smell of burning grass and roasting hotdogs!!To heck with galvanized poisoning we cooked directly on the coffee can.We survived.Little did we know their were 1400 nukes on the island and that the island had become ground zero.The Okinawans didn't know it either.They found out later.Japan told them.
Pretty good work, easy explanation and easy to understand but more important thing is that use of cans which normally people put it in the dumpster , great work, congratulations
Best DIY rocket stove I've ever seen. Amazing work. Really nice efficient yellow flame.
Nice video and clear instruction.... i am born and raise in 3rd world country and this is nothing new. I remember using this stuff when i was little until one day proprane tank took over of my grandma's kitchen. But yes this is the coolest now 🤗
People still think my country is 3rd world...sometimes I think it's subjective. We have everything advanced countries have, but maybe less and not as fancy. Btw, still enjoy the woodstove cooking. I collected our own wood fod cooking.
Great stove fella... Only thing I would've done differently is that I would use another piece of the mesh for fuel grate...
A solid piece of metal actually works better, as the sticks slide in on it as the ends burn up.
Also you want that air to be sucked underneath the solid metal, and to come up inside the chimney.
Not to cause a fire in the feed tunnel, as happened at the start.
The way to get the fire drawing straight up the chimney immediately, is to sit another open ended can on top of the chimney when lighting the fire. The higher the chimney, the better the hot air rises. As the fuel and air are not very hot to begin with, increasing the height of the chimney temporarily, gives a much better burn.
Use tongs or gloves to lift the extra can off when the fire starts roaring!
@@rubygray7749 b
Presentation is very simple and easy to understand. Not like others looks hard and not simple. Excellent. Than you.
Just saw it. Looks good! Just one comment: you should have used the remaining bit of grid instead of sheet metal for the raiser of the fuel - it would give you much better air intake.
That's what I thought too!!
homie slapped cans together...burned paper in it and people in the comments are like.. wow what a great job! ive watched alot of these videos and yours is the best LOL who watches this genre of video on youtube.. i feel like i stumbled on some freaky cult obsessed with fires in cans LMAO..2021 and i got RECOMMENDED this video somehow AAAAND it has 5 million views, what happened to humans, did we downgrade holy smokes
Awsome build Andrew! Prayers and Blessings headed to you and your family! Love and God Bless America! Uncle Jeff!
Jeffrey Vasby and Canada too hey!😛
This is so simple, yet excellent and very much efficient, negligible heat losses. Thanx a lot for sharing.
Good video, excellent instruction. Made 1 back in high school, it worked great.
Great video
Better to place the feed spout so it is tipping downward into the rocket stove, thereby gravity feeding the stove is possible.
Makes sense 👍
Also, for safety's sake, bend the corners of the screen to it from moving or sliding off the fire while cooking.
@@karmelicanke And he should have been using those gloves I saw in the background. Safety is always first.
@@beepositiveforever971 sa zxcxx
Then you would NOT have a Rocket Stove. That angle would, completely, alter the air intake flow. He's making a homemade Rocket Stove. Not a handy standard burner.you can slowly cook on.
Best video yet on small rocket stoves ! Thank you 🤗
Wow I am so impressed. I have watched many of these instructions and I like this the best, It is so clean and neat. Thanks so much !!!
Thank you for the demonstration on how to build a stove.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge about how to make a Rocket Stove. You just saved my family from only-God-knows-what.
God bless you abundantly.
Another good fire starter is to use pinecones. I think if you used your grate on top for the metal piece that sits under the kindling, it might work even better! Love this idea & video! Thank you 😊
Going to collect lots of pine cones💪💪
Cool !!! I'm a duct man and a furnace repair man and a welder , peice of cake , THANKS YOUNG FÉLLOW.
Claro que si. Una muy buena idea para tener mi estufa. Tan fácil... Gracias por compartir tus ideas y consejos. Recibe un fuerte abrazo desde Irapuato Guanajuato México
Best, effective and portable design I have seen so far. A handle would have been just the last touch to carry it.
Great job sweetheart! My husband and I are going to give this a try, Thank you, God Bless!
Good use of used cans.
The grill that supports the wood in the firebox is better if its not a solid piece of metal.
The air movement should get all around the wood so it draws even better.
You could use some more of that expanded metal you used for the top trivet.
Or finer expanded metal that's maybe stronger so it can handle more heat.
The other thing is to turn the small extender piece of inside chimney up the other way so the cut edge is down and not a safety issue.
1kg Coffee comes in a tin can.
Or go to a cafe or restaurant and ask for their size A10 tin cans that many food stuffs come in for the catering trade.
That is one of the neatest ones I have seen... Nice job. Thank you.
Turn the stove "into the wind", coat the underside of the pot with dish washing liquid, the black soot won't stick to it, rinses off clean! You're welcome. Good stove, good idea!
Sweet!
will try that since we are under enhance community quarantine and there's no way i could buy butane gas.. got plenty of dried leaves and sucks from our tree 😍👍🏻
ty for that!
I also coat with a little cooking oil. Washes right off.
THAT is a most welcomed tip. THANK YOU !!!
Try tracing the can on a piece of paper and then use that paper to make the hole. It makes a tighter better hole for the smaller can. Also, if you use a can opener to make the holes on the outer can, it could help with the support of the lid.
Thanks for sharing your ideas 😍
Plan to make that also🤔
Quarantine 2020 enjoy watching😊
That was very interest, Andrew. Thank you for sharing. I have to confess, though, what made me nervous were the combustible items near your rocket stove. Hopefully, those who try this at home will follow the same guidelines as should be an open grill, and that is to keep it at least six feet away from any structure or combustible items nearby. Just a word of caution. Just sayin' because sometimes we can get so absorbed in the project itself, we can forget about what's most important...our safety and the safety of others.
My grandfather taught me how to do something very similar 55 years ago. When something works, do it.
I love your solo stove and the way that you set it up
As kids we used sand, gravel or cement for insulation. It also serves as weight.
Sand, gravel and cement are not insulators. They absorb lots of geat, reducing rhe heat available to cook with, and using a lot more fuel.
This is so very smart! Loved the Hobo version too! So convenient! Love this!
Thank you ! You had good luck with that one ! Nice work ;)
A mixture of waterglass and perlite gives a ok kind of refractory, by the way. The problem with burning wood and plants is that it makes corrosive fumes and there is little to none material which can resist for long. Doesn't matter, because this is how the world works. Refraktories are a kind of materials which are consumed during the process. For instance to make a car consums 2000 kilograms of refractory materials. They just dissolve into the molten glass which is processed in the furnace. By implementing a good refractory covering the stove can be made in away so it last for very long.
I really like the video!
Thank you for a great practical video.. God bless your 🎄 Christmas season
Now I'm trying to find coffee that still comes in a can!
Ketchup can is what I used.
You can try getting the big food cans from restaurants. Many coffee cans are either plastic, cardboard/plastic, or very thin metal these days.
What about an unused paint can?
Industrial kichens get a lot of ingredients in those cans. As permission of a local restaurant fir their "empties"...
Sams club big red tin can and the ground coffee is good 10 bucks
YOU, SIR, are an EXCELLENT TEACHER!!! Your language is clear & concise. You are obviously quite an intelligent young man with a well thought out plan. Camera angles, lighting, audio quality ALL EXCELLENT. Thank you for taking an extra moment and carefully showing each step in depth. And, may I add... THANK YOU VERY MUCH for NOT playing ridiculously loud & trance-like music in the background. Yo!*ur parents must be very proud of you!!! Thank you for sharing, and inspiring me, and literally giving me the courage to *think I can!* (Is there a pun in there? LOL ) I have subbed & liked. Keep the great content coming :-D God bless you!!!
Psychiatrist.
Malignant Narcissism ;)
Kube Dog
Kathleen Zimmerman tell the truth....are you his mom??!??
@Gr8Soul ... It would be an honor to be this fine young man's mother! I simply recognize greatness when I see it. :-D
Hi , so nice,, we remember our days with such stove,in India in 80's, its called chulla in India, it was in every house,, now also we find in villages in India,,
Next time coat pot bottom, sides with soap. Easier to wash off. An old 83 year old camper . Great idea. Ol Bear
I learned a lot of this tips and i plan to do like this when i came home to my home town great idea i salute to you sir
Bidiosdelachicadeñmetrolaermita
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Loved the video. One question how did the plaster of Paris hold up over time. You are a very good teacher. Please do more videos.
Perfect size, and very simple to imitate. Thank you 😊
Best video I’ve ever seen on this subject!
Bravo!
Then you need to look more if this is the best you've seen. Haha
Very clear and great explained, thanks! How cool is this! Congrats! I love to have survival skills!
I've been building these for a while now" They are the Greatest thing since Apple pie.!! Here's a little Tip" from an aged pro"
The space between the wall's is where you will get you're longest time, Running, Heat,!! Or Not.!!
SO, think it through good before adding the insulation.!! That's why Some tiny wood and small rocket stoves" pass
OR Fial." The Best thing I've found to use for this
Space is ( used lava Rock's) like can be Baught for a gas grill, there used to keep the gas heat more even inside a grill, then a little concreteTo fill in the spaces between them.
That's "my Secret" to my different types of Heaters" putting out "Good Heat all most all night Long.!! So, maybe I should share my technique in a utube video.??? lolol
Would love to see your version mate! Go for it...you might be the next big UA-camr! Good Luck!
@@TheRoadDawg HEY" THANKS!!
I MEAN IT,!! THANK YOU MY FRIEND.!!
But if you don't mind I will meantion you're one of the people who incoraged
Me, to Show everyone what I have discovered.!! I not only have newer version of the "Rocket stoves" But I also have figured out Some add on's that not only heat water, but do a lot more, ACTUALLY, My add-ons" are what I've been working on for SO"SO" LONG.!! I have good news, for every one who follows my channel.!! I will be "OPEN SOURCEING" Everything I have invented" as an add-on, to My Version of the Rocket Stove.,!!! I'm not gonna ask for $$ For Something that will help people, all over the world 🌎!!!!
@@TheRoadDawg
Oh, P.S. I wanted to say" that I've had other's say basically the same thing as well, to me. Also" I'm not only going to focase on the Rocket stoves, I've been working on a way to power a Home/RV/Camper, Or pretty much any other place that we can call home" for any length of time.!! The good NEWS is: I've REALLY CRACKED IT. Watch for my 1st, video.!! I'm gonna be Open Sorceing Anything I've Discovered,.!!!
ARK ANGEL What’s your U Tup channel
Thank you 🌷👍
Awesome video man, I actually am in the process of making one of my own for my channel, but yours is absolutely a great build
Instead of taping the cans, integrate tabs into the cuts instead of totally cutting out and pop rivet or screw together. Great idea for boiling a billy quickly:-)