mcseal2
WKR
- Joined
- May 8, 2014
- Messages
- 2,726
Anyone used these?
I have a smaller campfire version that works well for camp cooking. Once a fire is going it keeps damp wood going much easier than an open campfire. I don’t have to split wood to get to the dry center as much. I can use it for boiling or simmering or put a skillet on it. For river camping when driftwood is in short supply its pretty handy. It isn’t nearly as fast as propane or butane but I don’t mind that when I’m sitting around waiting for a catfish to bite. If I have enough twigs and small branches I can keep it going easy to keep my hands warm on a cool night too. It doesn’t take a very big piece of wood is the biggest downside, it has a 7” opening at the top. With dry wood there is very little smoke due to the design. With wet wood there is smoke, but at least it burns.
I do a handful of trips each year that we have a lot of people on. Usually bird hunts with college friends. We end up spending a lot of time around a fire and there isn’t room to all be out of the smoke. I have been thinking of ways we can sit all the way around a fire without anyone having to be in the smoke. Also there is more fire risk with an open fire in an old tractor rim like we have been doing. I’m debating between buying a larger solo stove and building a chiminea out of a 55 gallon drum.
The biggest downside I have seen on reviews of the solo stove fire pits is that the heat all goes up, the sides are made to stay cool with the double wall design. I was curious if anyone was using one of these and your thoughts about usable heat from it? If I go this route I considered cutting out a door to put wood in 55 gallon drum I could set upside down over the top of the solo stove. As that drum warmed it would radiate heat.
My other idea is to put a 48” long 8” stove pipe on the top of a vertical 55 gallon drum. That would get most of the smoke up past our heads sitting in lawn chairs. I would cut a door in the drum for adding wood. I’d put some all thread through the barrel down lower for a Weber grill grate to sit on. My fire would be built on this grate. Below the grate I would have holes drilled for airflow. I would probably weld an angle iron frame to the barrel also so the bottom would sit a few inches off the ground and I could have air holes on the bottom if I wanted.
Either would allow for campfire cooking. The solo stove with a tripod over the fire and the drum by setting a pot or skillet on top of it. The solo stove would be more portable, but thats not a big deal for this project. It would mostly get used at home, just hauled a few times a year.
Anyone using anything like this for truck camping or at home? Maybe I am just making a simple fire way to complicated,
I have a smaller campfire version that works well for camp cooking. Once a fire is going it keeps damp wood going much easier than an open campfire. I don’t have to split wood to get to the dry center as much. I can use it for boiling or simmering or put a skillet on it. For river camping when driftwood is in short supply its pretty handy. It isn’t nearly as fast as propane or butane but I don’t mind that when I’m sitting around waiting for a catfish to bite. If I have enough twigs and small branches I can keep it going easy to keep my hands warm on a cool night too. It doesn’t take a very big piece of wood is the biggest downside, it has a 7” opening at the top. With dry wood there is very little smoke due to the design. With wet wood there is smoke, but at least it burns.
I do a handful of trips each year that we have a lot of people on. Usually bird hunts with college friends. We end up spending a lot of time around a fire and there isn’t room to all be out of the smoke. I have been thinking of ways we can sit all the way around a fire without anyone having to be in the smoke. Also there is more fire risk with an open fire in an old tractor rim like we have been doing. I’m debating between buying a larger solo stove and building a chiminea out of a 55 gallon drum.
The biggest downside I have seen on reviews of the solo stove fire pits is that the heat all goes up, the sides are made to stay cool with the double wall design. I was curious if anyone was using one of these and your thoughts about usable heat from it? If I go this route I considered cutting out a door to put wood in 55 gallon drum I could set upside down over the top of the solo stove. As that drum warmed it would radiate heat.
My other idea is to put a 48” long 8” stove pipe on the top of a vertical 55 gallon drum. That would get most of the smoke up past our heads sitting in lawn chairs. I would cut a door in the drum for adding wood. I’d put some all thread through the barrel down lower for a Weber grill grate to sit on. My fire would be built on this grate. Below the grate I would have holes drilled for airflow. I would probably weld an angle iron frame to the barrel also so the bottom would sit a few inches off the ground and I could have air holes on the bottom if I wanted.
Either would allow for campfire cooking. The solo stove with a tripod over the fire and the drum by setting a pot or skillet on top of it. The solo stove would be more portable, but thats not a big deal for this project. It would mostly get used at home, just hauled a few times a year.
Anyone using anything like this for truck camping or at home? Maybe I am just making a simple fire way to complicated,
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