by Stridertim+123 » Mon 14 Apr, 2014 3:25 pm
Moodog55, I like your effort with you tent stove. There does not seem to be much appeal for this in Australia. Have you made a door for it? Does it smoke a lot? I hope the cat survived the test burn. I also am a DIY tent stover and am considered to be mad to put a stove in a 3 m diameter silnylon tent, but it makes those ski trips involving backpacking/camping so much more inviting if you can make your tent warm. The stove in the Volvo shot makes me seem sane. Do you plan to cook on the stove? I have put quite a lot of effort into my many wood burning tent stoves to improve this aspect of my stoves. My latest design is is made from stainless steel and titanium and weighs less than 500g and it all fits inside the one little box for back packing. It is designed to sit up off the ground or snow surface on a short bush pole that is driven into the snow (or ground). It is 180mm long, 120mm wide and 70mm high stainless steel box that acts as a heat exchanger, cook top, spark arrestor and ask ash tray and it provides you with a 120 by 120mm square cook top for boiling, snow melting,food heating and wood drying rack for sticks hanging underneath and beyond the perimeter of the box to act as a guard against accidental contact with the hot surface. It has a 40mm diameter roll up titanium flue pipe and a 50mm diameter SS fuel tube that stands above and at one end of the above mentioned box. Sticks of wood are fed into the fuel tube and they burn off at the bottom in a clear fuzed quartz glass tube that spreads a lovely light around the tent. The sticks feed in by gravity but the glass allows you to manage the fuel flow if the sticks get hung up. It can burn as little as 400g of wood per hour and it gets mighty hot. I have a few shots of the stove that may interest you, but I could not upload them, so maybe there is some way that I can send you a personal email instead.
Keep up the good work with your stove.