Next thing to do is design and build an efficient wood fueled heater. I do have a reasonably sturdy Stainless steel pressure vessel here; an old bug sprayer, DiPel so non toxic to humans
Its a cylinder 170mm in diameter and 290mm tall, a slightly curved top with a 40mm hole in it for the pressure pump fitting and a flat top
As getting a semi permanent stove emptied of the ash I was thinking of turning it upside down and using a small stainless mesh or colander in the bottom with some sort of jam tin ash collector and running the flue out of the top. The collar is 50mm high Is 50mm of insulation enough? I'd probably use vermiculite for the low weight and easy availability
Quite a bit different to the last wood stove I build which has rusted out too quickly, used too much fuel too quickly and smoked like an old sailor. Burn the fuel as hot and efficiently as possible and use the hot flue as the tent heater.
The question is do I use a canted inlet or a horizontal one and what do I use as the fuel feed/air inlet ?
Would a short section of 100mm stainless steel flue be too large?
75m Stainless flue is almost impossible to get but I was thinking of using 100mm flue for the first section attached permanently to the firebox and using a length of Titanium foil for the height
Corvus/Franco you have a lot of experience with stoves, what's your thinking on the matter
These are excellent quality fittings but not cheap
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/251353524792 ... EBIDX%3AIT