Your reviews really nice, and it’s a nice stove. I’m on my 4th ammo can stove / automotive 3” pipe, cans from 12” to 18” to the big one 18” x 14” x 9”. The first few with dampers but they burn better open. The car pipes don’t get red hot. After hours of feeding ‘em the coals in ash last overnite. The best morale booster in the world !
@chippiepaul232 yes, it’s a secondary burn to get rid of the smoke. I didn’t realize that when I first did the video. It is a good design, but it burns up the wood fast at the expense of no smoke. As long as you’re feeding it firewoodit’s great.
Id be plugging the holes on the side at the bottom. They allow so much air to aid in the reburn but without smoke coming out the pipe you can’t be sure it’s damped down. Looks like a good stove other wise.
I have used fiberglass cloth to fix muffler pipes on vehicles before with clamps. Lasted over a year. You could roll up a chunk and stick inside the front of your air intakes inside the ash pan. Only burns when you put resin on it. I bet that would slow the burn too. Ordering one as soon as bank says I can. Will also hang a welding blanket behind it in tent. Thanks for the great video from North Bay.
Appreciate your review on this item bud. Just scored one that is fairly the same make, but different brand name. You covered this hot stove well. Thanks again. 🤙🏼
I just bought one about a month ago to heat a shed that I'm converting into a "Tiny House" for my adult daughter who had to come back home after a breakup and I positively LOVE it. The building is only 5 months old and is an uninsulated 12'x28' (Deluxe Playhouse Edition) and it keeps the building really comfortable for her as long as she is awake to load it but as with any wood stove it's going to go out overnight while she is sleeping so she does wake up and get ready for work cold usually but it's mid. Feb. right now so that's to be expected as well. It's the only heat source since I'm way too paranoid to run an electric heater out there on an extension cord. She also uses it to cook on and the pipe itself gets extremely hot and puts out a lot of heat. As far as I'm concerned it's perfect and when it warms up outside I'm going to put it outside and run copper tubing for a water line wrapped around the pipe so she can have a hot outdoor enclosed shower and hot tub. Before next winter I plan to buy another one for our house as supplemental heat on the cold side of the house. Also, I bought some fireproof cloth to put under it and on the wall where the pipe goes out. You can literally burn anything in it, corn cobs, wood chips, etc.. I really love ours. I just had to come back and share because I bought it after 3 weeks of research on heating options and decided on it after watching this video. Thanks!
Wood stove is significantly more of a fire hazard than an electric space heater. House fires reduced drastically after people moved away from stoves and fireplaces. Check the numbers for yourself.
josiahbradley1638 lol and your point is?? Everything is dangerous if people don’t research how to properly use them. I’ll keep my woodstoves and you can have the space heaters and life will go on..
Are they second wall side plates to take air in from the bottom and let it into the top for a secondary burn to keep your chimney pipes clean that air coming in the top would make it burn really hot
Neat stove. Because of the minor flaws, I would bet it is made in China ! One mod that might improve it's performance would be to put a baffle below the opening for the stack to deflect the flame from going up the stack and causing the pipe from becoming red hot. I have had stoves with a deflector in them, and it prevented the stack from overheating, while retaining more heat in the firebox, but still drafted well. You are pretty savvy, and I'm sure you will figure it out and improve it.
Yep baffle is built and being tested as we speak. So far it is keeping more heat in the stove to a point where now the top of the stove and just 3” of pipe are slightly glowing. I am playing with the height of the baffle and may drill a few holes in line with the stove pipe. It is kicking out the heat but we’ll see how long it lasts. It for sure smokes more than before though. Stove is not very controlable needs chimney dampner as well. Now I sit there and observe and drink my beer take mental notes.🤣
those side vents are afterburners, which why front damper is not doing anything i would put dampers on the side to control the after burner air as well
@Yeeleaf007 well charcoal is burned wood. I think you mean actual coal? If you are asking “can it burn coal” no it’s not designed to burn that fuel but I could possibly modify it to try that.
I have that exact stove. I need to replace the glass but can’t find one anywhere. I went to the company website but couldn’t find one. Do you have any suggestions on where to get a replacement glass?
Great stove! I just got one to cook on by using up my tons of fallen limbs. I'm watching your video for pointers before I set mine up this weekend. Thanks for the video!
@Indeewoods Will do. I set it up today. Will do first burn tomorrow. I am still trying to think of a way to prolong and protect the bottom from burning out too fast. I have some thin fire bricks, but they are too long, so I am considering cutting them to fit the bottom. I also considered doing what I do with my charcoal grills, putting a layer of cheap clay cat litter in the bottom. Has anyone tried this with these stoves? It really extends the life of my grills.
Over all, I like the video, although the stove pipe heating up to that red hot makes me somewhat concerned. Maybe the stove needs some kind of baffling. I think I'd like something more substantial than tent material around this stove. Good review. Thank you.
@SkyKing101010 yes it had “sparked” my interest as well. I ended up making a baffle for it and that make a big difference both good and bad. If you scroll through my other recent videos you’ll see the “Hot tent stove mods” vid. That one shows what I did.
@williamstuff I suppose you can do anything you want lol. It’s definitely a small enough size that would be suited for a van but of course there’s all kinds of risks and you’d have to make sure you knew what you were doing because you could burn yourself down pretty fast if you’re not careful and if you don’t install it properly. It’s not just something you go and throw in there and forget about it you need to know how to double shield everything and have the proper clearances so you don’t start a fire. You will have to be the judge of your own abilities.
Mine’s a 18x6x9 ammo can. It’s back end pivots on a bolt thru the top of the wheel well, in-line with the pipe straight up thru the roof, so it swings out of the way.
@@philliplee1193 1: How do you manage Rain? 2: Do you disassemble it for driving (at least the chimney part or not?) 3: Did you insulate the sides and back or something?
Looks Like a Great little Stove. I like the glass door that is a great feature you dont see on reasonable priced stoves. What diameter is the stove pipe, 2.5" ?
@dusty1498 ya I’d say it’s about 2.5-3” pipe. It’s really heavy duty stainless pipe. The glass is nice but it gets dirty and there’s no air wash to keep it clean so I’m going to modify my secondary burn holes to divert air at it to see if it works. I already made a stainless steel baffle to go inside to help stop the pipe from glowing red hot. You’ll see a video on that shortly. All in all it it’s a great little stove
@@Indeewoods An Idea for more heat retention would be to remove those metal internal metal panels and line it with fire brick it would add some weight but would hold the heat and extend the life of the stove. The fire brick cuts easy with a angle grinder and masonry disk
@dusty1498 that’s the secondary burn plate/ports. Bricks really just hold heat in the fire box which helps it smoke less. It does hold some heat but not enough to make it a game changer. Ultimately it needs more wood capacity.
@@IndeewoodsAh i see... I have that 3 inch imperial dampener i got off amazon it fits in 3 inch exhaust pipe but could be ground down to fit anything smaller. Maybe a 30lb propane tank is what you need for a larger capacity
@dusty1498 ya I was and still am going to build a stove but thought i’d try one of these out. I have a few 5/20/30lb tanks here to build something with. This stove would be perfect for the ice shack i’d like to make.
@davidparker2173 I don’t think any these little tent stoves have outside air draw. Are you putting it in a tiny house thats reallybair tight well insulated?
@davidparker2173. What are the dimensions of your cabin? These are not big stoves you’re better off having something that can hold fire overnight if you plan on sleeping in it. With these stoves, you’d have to stoke it every two hours. They’re just not big enough for most cabins.
I appreciate and thank you for that information. I was thinking of building a starter cabin first, not much bigger than a tent, at about 7.5 feet, by 9 inner dimensions, so maybe a smaller 4 inch piped stove with an air inlet would do best; of course it would, but they are pricey. Once I strike clay, I could build a small rocket mass heater, and those provide heat long after the fire has gone out. @@Indeewoods
@davidparker2173 a RMH takes up a lot of room you won’t have in that small of a space. This little heater will heat that no problem but on an over night burn you’ll only get a few hrs of heat.
Are you sure your dampening issues are not caused by those metal sheets on the side walls ?..... They look to have small holes along the top which would indicate that they may be gasification air holes that are linked to those unrestricted logo shaped holes on the outside sides ?
That stove has secondary combustion. Those holes inside and out are for that. I have a similar one just don't run it to hard. Turn down the primary air.I put a damper on my flue. Got one on Amazon. Cheers from Cape Breton nice review.
Lol he said it comes with a Lil poker. That's to lift the round top insert so you don't burn your Lil fingers. But hey. We all learn as we go so all good
Those hole should not be there ...absolutely !!but in the larger picture .they would make no diff...other then mayb CO2 issue .that stove has secondary burn option...in other words ..more oxygen ...hotter burn .personally ..I would not burn with out a damper ..re: red-hot pipes.. cheers
@@thebearsden1701 the holes are there for secondary burn designed for less smoke out the pipe. “CO2” would not be coming out of those holes as there is far more draw going up the chimney pipe. The secondary burn holes ignite the fire/smoke from the top down so when you close the air intake the fire has no choise but to draw air from the secondary burn holes which does actually work on this stove and is why it burns very clean.
He wants to do a modification on the stove but the indication was a hot stove pipe will burn everything an hour and a half and all the woods all gone you need to put some coal in there
That door is not adjusted …. Not even air tight. Damper would have much more adjustability it set up correctly. IMHO … This thing is not meant to run with a roaring fire.
I ,personally ..would NOT turn the pipes around .you could end up with CO 2(carbon dioxide)..leaking past the joints...the way it is ..CO2 goes up & out the top ..just my opinion..cheers
@@thebearsden1701 there is absolutely no way “CO2” would leak past the joints when the hole in the chimney pipe is much larger and causes the draw. These pipes are upside down and creosote can leak out because its a heavier liquid so the chances of it starting a fire on the stove is an issue. Turning the pipes around would fix the issue and the actual code for all woodstoves is to have them that way so if there was a “CO2” risk i’m sure Canadian and US authorities would have already thought of that .
@Indeewoods I have to disagree ...those pipes upside down.. don't fit that tight that CO2 can't leak by ..and if your depending on government ...they would have condemed them already..I bet if u use a good CO2 detector...you will find my reasoning is sound ..as well if u look at every camp stove ..the pipes are not upside down .large end down ..
@thebearsden1701 the gov doesn’t have a say on those stoves because they are not approved for homes. These pipes fit so tight I often have a hard time pulling them apart. The creosote leaks by the joints to the outside of the pipe. “CO2” as you say, can not leak out unless maybe you had a roaring fire and then put a plug on top of the chimney. If you are worried more about “CO2” leaking past these joints vs creosote that could actually start a fire so be it but I and i’m sure most post people are worried about fires starting not minuit amount of “CO2”.
@@Indeewoods no its right at the beginning when you were well away from the mic was OK once you started showing the stove close up cos you were right on top of the mic just something for you to remember that's all if you notice I was not the only one who commented but at least I stayed till it got better
Oh, OK right on yeah weird I can hear it fine. I’m sure if people are interested in the video they’ll just move a little closer to the speaker so they can hear it.
@georgelaliberte1053 I hear ya and i’ve built stoves in the past but I wanted a tiny stove asap and am to busy getting ready for winter so that’s why I bought it.Not everyone can fabricate and weld or have the tools to do it.
@10thAveFreezeOut oh, has it? I think there’s a couple other models just like that one and sometimes they’re cheaper. I’ll have to check it out again. Thanks for the heads up.
@@Indeewoods There might be similar ones close to the original price, now that I've clicked around Amazon a little. They are slight variations but close enough that your review still holds true.
Your reviews really nice, and it’s a nice stove. I’m on my 4th ammo can stove / automotive 3” pipe, cans from 12” to 18” to the big one 18” x 14” x 9”. The first few with dampers but they burn better open. The car pipes don’t get red hot. After hours of feeding ‘em the coals in ash last overnite. The best morale booster in the world !
@philliplee1193 thank you. Yes a good coal base helps but its to cold here to have it carry over night. Still it’s nice heat when the fire is going.
the fire flame designs ,on the sides are vents so enabling double burn...its a nice stove great design
@chippiepaul232 yes, it’s a secondary burn to get rid of the smoke. I didn’t realize that when I first did the video. It is a good design, but it burns up the wood fast at the expense of no smoke. As long as you’re feeding it firewoodit’s great.
@@Indeewoods add a damper to save wood. If you have the stove wide open it's going to burn up wood. Several videos on how to avoid it.
Id be plugging the holes on the side at the bottom. They allow so much air to aid in the reburn but without smoke coming out the pipe you can’t be sure it’s damped down. Looks like a good stove other wise.
I have used fiberglass cloth to fix muffler pipes on vehicles before with clamps. Lasted over a year. You could roll up a chunk and stick inside the front of your air intakes inside the ash pan. Only burns when you put resin on it. I bet that would slow the burn too. Ordering one as soon as bank says I can. Will also hang a welding blanket behind it in tent. Thanks for the great video from North Bay.
@chriswoody985 good idea I’ll try that thanks!
I very much purchased this stove based on your amazon review - nice to see you have a full length video review as well. Thank you!
@daniellepatenaude your welcome. There’s another one on that stove that should be coming out soon.
Appreciate your review on this item bud. Just scored one that is fairly the same make, but different brand name. You covered this hot stove well. Thanks again. 🤙🏼
@ScoutLakai right on glad you like it. What brand stove did you get?
@Indeewoods It's called Huskfirn, and it was a Christmas gift.
I just bought one about a month ago to heat a shed that I'm converting into a "Tiny House" for my adult daughter who had to come back home after a breakup and I positively LOVE it. The building is only 5 months old and is an uninsulated 12'x28' (Deluxe Playhouse Edition) and it keeps the building really comfortable for her as long as she is awake to load it but as with any wood stove it's going to go out overnight while she is sleeping so she does wake up and get ready for work cold usually but it's mid. Feb. right now so that's to be expected as well. It's the only heat source since I'm way too paranoid to run an electric heater out there on an extension cord. She also uses it to cook on and the pipe itself gets extremely hot and puts out a lot of heat. As far as I'm concerned it's perfect and when it warms up outside I'm going to put it outside and run copper tubing for a water line wrapped around the pipe so she can have a hot outdoor enclosed shower and hot tub. Before next winter I plan to buy another one for our house as supplemental heat on the cold side of the house. Also, I bought some fireproof cloth to put under it and on the wall where the pipe goes out. You can literally burn anything in it, corn cobs, wood chips, etc.. I really love ours. I just had to come back and share because I bought it after 3 weeks of research on heating options and decided on it after watching this video. Thanks!
Wood stove is significantly more of a fire hazard than an electric space heater. House fires reduced drastically after people moved away from stoves and fireplaces. Check the numbers for yourself.
josiahbradley1638 lol and your point is??
Everything is dangerous if people don’t research how to properly use them.
I’ll keep my woodstoves and you can have the space heaters and life will go on..
@@Indeewoods this is true. Any kind of heat source can be dangerous if used irrisponsably.
Are they second wall side plates to take air in from the bottom and let it into the top for a secondary burn to keep your chimney pipes clean that air coming in the top would make it burn really hot
Neat stove. Because of the minor flaws, I would bet it is made in China ! One mod that might improve it's performance would be to put a baffle below the opening for the stack to deflect the flame from going up the stack and causing the pipe from becoming red hot. I have had stoves with a deflector in them, and it prevented the stack from overheating, while retaining more heat in the firebox, but still drafted well. You are pretty savvy, and I'm sure you will figure it out and improve it.
Yep baffle is built and being tested as we speak. So far it is keeping more heat in the stove to a point where now the top of the stove and just 3” of pipe are slightly glowing. I am playing with the height of the baffle and may drill a few holes in line with the stove pipe.
It is kicking out the heat but we’ll see how long it lasts. It for sure smokes more than before though. Stove is not very controlable needs chimney dampner as well.
Now I sit there and observe and drink my beer take mental notes.🤣
Great minds think alike !@@Indeewoods
those side vents are afterburners, which why front damper is not doing anything i would put dampers on the side to control the after burner air as well
@mikeriverajr4447 yes secondary air holes to burn the fire from the top vs the bottom.
Great video. Cant wait to see it out on a camping trip.
@Vandy97 right on ya will be interesting to see how it does.
Hi from West Virginia 😊 very cool lil stove 👍
@dawndavis6915 Hello!
Are you near West Virginia where the Blackwater 100 used to be?
Ja, I think you better install a chimney damper. PS: Chinese don't have safety codes, for your info.
I have the same stove. It works good just get a keyway for the stove pipe. Works perfect in my ice hut.
@corysnladventures2758 you are talking about the chimney pipe damper? Never heard of the term “Key Way”.
I own this stove. It is a very silly piece of junk. I love it.
@alectucker9439 haha right on!
😂😂
Bought the same thing on Temu. Does it come with the chimney pipe?
@mrobinson57 oh really? How much are they selling them for? And yes it comes with chimney pipe.
It looks like you could put some Universal Baffle Board right above those air inlet holes.
Ya, that is a good idea.
I'm getting a man cave soon and i was thinking of geting one and making a hole in the roof and puting the pipe out the roof. Do you recommend??
use a double wall pipe thru the roof
Can you use charcoal in the wood stove?
@Yeeleaf007 charcoal or do you mean straight coal?
@@Indeewoods any type of charcoal.
@Yeeleaf007 well charcoal is burned wood. I think you mean actual coal?
If you are asking “can it burn coal” no it’s not designed to burn that fuel but I could possibly modify it to try that.
@@Indeewoods you answer my question. I bought the same one and want to use coal. Why can’t I use coal?
@Yeeleaf007 because it’s not designed to burn coal. Resesearch it lots of info out there.
I have that exact stove. I need to replace the glass but can’t find one anywhere. I went to the company website but couldn’t find one. Do you have any suggestions on where to get a replacement glass?
@@denniskuenze659 try a store that sells woodstoves or a glass shop
I replaced my glass with a flattened out piece of stainless stove pipe. In a pinch
@ Thanks for the reply. I was able to exchange the stove for a new one. I’m all set now!
Great stove! I just got one to cook on by using up my tons of fallen limbs. I'm watching your video for pointers before I set mine up this weekend. Thanks for the video!
@grannyanniesfarm4962 awesome! You’ll be nice and warm in no time. Let us know how the stove works out.
@Indeewoods Will do. I set it up today. Will do first burn tomorrow. I am still trying to think of a way to prolong and protect the bottom from burning out too fast. I have some thin fire bricks, but they are too long, so I am considering cutting them to fit the bottom. I also considered doing what I do with my charcoal grills, putting a layer of cheap clay cat litter in the bottom. Has anyone tried this with these stoves? It really extends the life of my grills.
@grannyanniesfarm4972 you are talking about the very bottom ash tray that slides out or the fixed section above it with the slots/holes in it?
@Indeewoods There isn't a slide out ash tray in the bottom of mine. It is just a box.
.
Grannyanniesfarm4972 oh ok I thought you had the same stove as me.
Did the cooking lid leak?
@snakeclaw no
Enjoyed your video
how long did your wood last? once started one full chamber-
I take it you didn’t watch the full video review? Lol
Over all, I like the video, although the stove pipe heating up to that red hot makes me somewhat concerned. Maybe the stove needs some kind of baffling.
I think I'd like something more substantial than tent material around this stove.
Good review. Thank you.
@SkyKing101010 yes it had “sparked” my interest as well.
I ended up making a baffle for it and that make a big difference both good and bad.
If you scroll through my other recent videos you’ll see the “Hot tent stove mods” vid. That one shows what I did.
I believe the holes on the side that go up to the top of the inner plate and then come out or for your secondary burn
@mauriceupp9381 yes that’s right they are.
Wonder if a guy could zip cut the back out and make an extension about 8 - 10 inches longer and weld it in to make it hold more wood?
@Saskguytoon that’s a darn good idea I may just try that.
Do u think you can install this on a Van?
@williamstuff I suppose you can do anything you want lol.
It’s definitely a small enough size that would be suited for a van but of course there’s all kinds of risks and you’d have to make sure you knew what you were doing because you could burn yourself down pretty fast if you’re not careful and if you don’t install it properly. It’s not just something you go and throw in there and forget about it you need to know how to double shield everything and have the proper clearances so you don’t start a fire. You will have to be the judge of your own abilities.
Mine’s a 18x6x9 ammo can. It’s back end pivots on a bolt thru the top of the wheel well, in-line with the pipe straight up thru the roof, so it swings out of the way.
@@philliplee1193
1: How do you manage Rain?
2: Do you disassemble it for driving (at least the chimney part or not?)
3: Did you insulate the sides and back or something?
Do u still have the stove? Will u test it at -15 to -30 ?
@terryxperry yes I just got it not long ago. I will test it at -15-30 if you want me to.
Cool if want to test out . I know AB can be pretty cold in the winter
@@terryxperry yep it sure is. Where in the globe are you at?
AB
What’s the size for the chimney pipe
@shawnwhaling I think its 3”
Looks Like a Great little Stove. I like the glass door that is a great feature you dont see on reasonable priced stoves. What diameter is the stove pipe, 2.5" ?
@dusty1498 ya I’d say it’s about 2.5-3” pipe. It’s really heavy duty stainless pipe.
The glass is nice but it gets dirty and there’s no air wash to keep it clean so I’m going to modify my secondary burn holes to divert air at it to see if it works.
I already made a stainless steel baffle to go inside to help stop the pipe from glowing red hot. You’ll see a video on that shortly.
All in all it it’s a great little stove
@@Indeewoods An Idea for more heat retention would be to remove those metal internal metal panels and line it with fire brick it would add some weight but would hold the heat and extend the life of the stove. The fire brick cuts easy with a angle grinder and masonry disk
@dusty1498 that’s the secondary burn plate/ports. Bricks really just hold heat in the fire box which helps it smoke less. It does hold some heat but not enough to make it a game changer. Ultimately it needs more wood capacity.
@@IndeewoodsAh i see... I have that 3 inch imperial dampener i got off amazon it fits in 3 inch exhaust pipe but could be ground down to fit anything smaller. Maybe a 30lb propane tank is what you need for a larger capacity
@dusty1498 ya I was and still am going to build a stove but thought i’d try one of these out. I have a few 5/20/30lb tanks here to build something with. This stove would be perfect for the ice shack i’d like to make.
I wonder if I could find one of these with an air inlet I could attach a 4 inch pipe to, so it does not eat up all my air.
@davidparker2173 I don’t think any these little tent stoves have outside air draw.
Are you putting it in a tiny house thats reallybair tight well insulated?
I had thought of putting one in a starter cabin, (not much bigger than a tent) and not a tent. @@Indeewoods
@davidparker2173. What are the dimensions of your cabin? These are not big stoves you’re better off having something that can hold fire overnight if you plan on sleeping in it. With these stoves, you’d have to stoke it every two hours. They’re just not big enough for most cabins.
I appreciate and thank you for that information. I was thinking of building a starter cabin first, not much bigger than a tent, at about 7.5 feet, by 9 inner dimensions, so maybe a smaller 4 inch piped stove with an air inlet would do best; of course it would, but they are pricey. Once I strike clay, I could build a small rocket mass heater, and those provide heat long after the fire has gone out. @@Indeewoods
@davidparker2173 a RMH takes up a lot of room you won’t have in that small of a space. This little heater will heat that no problem but on an over night burn you’ll only get a few hrs of heat.
Are you sure your dampening issues are not caused by those metal sheets on the side walls ?..... They look to have small holes along the top which would indicate that they may be gasification air holes that are linked to those unrestricted logo shaped holes on the outside sides ?
@zed666ish yes you are correct that is the secondary burn holes.
@@Indeewoods Afterwards I watched your later videos on the stove where you talk about them 👍
It's $199.00 on Amazon today and $15 for the damper
@elizabethbrown1276 that’s pretty good last time I looked it was 225 or something like that.
That stove has secondary combustion. Those holes inside and out are for that. I have a similar one just don't run it to hard. Turn down the primary air.I put a damper on my flue. Got one on Amazon. Cheers from Cape Breton nice review.
@@dadgad68 yes it sure does but I can’t remember if I knew that when I made that video.
Cheers and welcome to the channel
Lol he said it comes with a Lil poker. That's to lift the round top insert so you don't burn your Lil fingers. But hey. We all learn as we go so all good
@BrandonMills-lq3xf haha
Yes, it’s used for that as well lol
Looks great, if only it were 50% bigger!
@ahowl7mx yes they need to supersize it lol
Dry pine burns hot and fast
@Sam-dm4rj you’re right we’ll have to see how it does with hard wood.
Hold on a minute stop the bus. Silver birch. No pine. No creosote. DOLLY Dimple.😂🏴👍
Am I wrong or does this guy look and sound like Paul Harrel (pre-cancer)?
Was the first thing I thought also. Had to do a double take on the channel name
Great i think i only paid 49.99 , now im worried, could be off on price ,it stainless steel, but was NOT over 100 $
@ruthannmarie7119 I’m in Canada so our prices are always higher. Are you in the USA?
Don’t forget these are Canadian prices. In the USA it will be cheaper.
Those hole should not be there ...absolutely !!but in the larger picture .they would make no diff...other then mayb CO2 issue .that stove has secondary burn option...in other words ..more oxygen ...hotter burn .personally ..I would not burn with out a damper ..re: red-hot pipes.. cheers
@@thebearsden1701 the holes are there for secondary burn designed for less smoke out the pipe.
“CO2” would not be coming out of those holes as there is far more draw going up the chimney pipe.
The secondary burn holes ignite the fire/smoke from the top down so when you close the air intake the fire has no choise but to draw air from the secondary burn holes which does actually work on this stove and is why it burns very clean.
" can't believe it, it is totally smokefreeeee" meanwhile it is billowing out of the stovepipe-connection
@ArmageddonAfterparty without the baffle installed it runs pretty smoke-free.
Any Stove will smoke when your first getting it going.
I can’t hear nothing 😢
@cibaocastillo4892 I’ll make the next one louder thanks for letting me know. 🙂
He wants to do a modification on the stove but the indication was a hot stove pipe will burn everything an hour and a half and all the woods all gone you need to put some coal in there
@shawncahill8519 I like your way of thinking!!
Small stoves like this won’t handle coal. you need full cast iron for that
That door is not adjusted …. Not even air tight. Damper would have much more adjustability it set up correctly. IMHO … This thing is not meant to run with a roaring fire.
@carlgriebno5691 you are right that’s why these things should come with a chimney damper but they don’t..
I did my first burn on this stove yesterday and it's sooooo dangerous!!!! I'm very concerned about using it in a tent. Proceed with caution ⚠️
@LoneCrowAdventures why is that? I haven’t had any issues so far.
😂😂😂
Thnx, now i know to save for the cubic mini.
I'm not welding anything.
Can't sue China.
winnerwell another china made stove brand is cheaper than cubic mini, with very good construction.
I ,personally ..would NOT turn the pipes around .you could end up with CO 2(carbon dioxide)..leaking past the joints...the way it is ..CO2 goes up & out the top ..just my opinion..cheers
@@thebearsden1701 there is absolutely no way “CO2” would leak past the joints when the hole in the chimney pipe is much larger and causes the draw.
These pipes are upside down and creosote can leak out because its a heavier liquid so the chances of it starting a fire on the stove is an issue.
Turning the pipes around would fix the issue and the actual code for all woodstoves is to have them that way so if there was a “CO2” risk i’m sure Canadian and US authorities would have already thought of that .
@Indeewoods I have to disagree ...those pipes upside down.. don't fit that tight that CO2 can't leak by ..and if your depending on government ...they would have condemed them already..I bet if u use a good CO2 detector...you will find my reasoning is sound
..as well if u look at every camp stove ..the pipes are not upside down .large end down ..
@thebearsden1701 the gov doesn’t have a say on those stoves because they are not approved for homes.
These pipes fit so tight I often have a hard time pulling them apart.
The creosote leaks by the joints to the outside of the pipe.
“CO2” as you say, can not leak out unless maybe you had a roaring fire and then put a plug on top of the chimney.
If you are worried more about “CO2” leaking past these joints vs creosote that could actually start a fire so be it but I and i’m sure most post people are worried about fires starting not minuit amount of “CO2”.
You need to be.nearer the mic cant hear much of what you were saying at the start
@flogsometogs4539 it’s loud and clear when I watch it is your volume turned down maybe?
@@Indeewoods no its right at the beginning when you were well away from the mic was OK once you started showing the stove close up cos you were right on top of the mic just something for you to remember that's all if you notice I was not the only one who commented but at least I stayed till it got better
Oh, OK right on yeah weird I can hear it fine.
I’m sure if people are interested in the video they’ll just move a little closer to the speaker so they can hear it.
I just build all my stoves that I need .
Then I get what I want
@georgelaliberte1053 I hear ya and i’ve built stoves in the past but I wanted a tiny stove asap and am to busy getting ready for winter so that’s why I bought it.Not everyone can fabricate and weld or have the tools to do it.
sure you do.... 🙄🙄😀😀
Flip the stove pipe
@@forestanderson3267 it would need a different adapter on the stove end to make it work
YOU NEED A DAMPER ?
@richardspillman5627 yes I bought one for it. Much better now.
Unbelievable!!! Of course it will draw with door wide open!!!!
A few months later and the price has doubled. Not worth it.
@10thAveFreezeOut oh, has it?
I think there’s a couple other models just like that one and sometimes they’re cheaper. I’ll have to check it out again. Thanks for the heads up.
@@Indeewoods There might be similar ones close to the original price, now that I've clicked around Amazon a little. They are slight variations but close enough that your review still holds true.
Just seems so small
It is small.
why its called a "Tiny Wood Stove"
please read the manual next time before u do the video...
@thomasm.8755 I’ll get right on that 😂😂