Making Hot Water without Electricity!!

2024 ж. 17 Мам.
120 522 Рет қаралды

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Testing to see if the Thermosyphon effect will work with my Rocket Stove!
0:00 -Intro
1:30 - Active Heat exchange Test
4:00 - Passive Heat exchange Test
12:33 - Results
#rocketstove #Diy #hotwaterheater

Пікірлер
  • Boiling water? Just need a pot and fire? This kinda stupid.

    @darwinmabazza6314@darwinmabazza6314Ай бұрын
    • More for if u was off grid and wanted to bath and shower in hot water still more effective for larger volumes of water

      @Ausomeoutdoors@Ausomeoutdoors19 күн бұрын
    • thats not what this is for.

      @ArtisanCustoms@ArtisanCustoms17 күн бұрын
    • @@Ausomeoutdoors um nothing a larger pot wouldnt solve. In the pre-industrial age (back when everything was JUST fukn PERFECT and SO pure) They had fire underneath tha cast iron bathtub. Folks just sat RIGHT IN the pot with the water as it was being heated. So - thanks for playing.

      @JulietsMan@JulietsMan13 күн бұрын
    • @@ArtisanCustoms Oh. Wel...ok then. I dont want to boil water. I just wnat to make it luke warm...so why not use a process thats 10x less efficient and 1000 times harder and slower.......to make warm water. This is 21st century orange chimp logic if i ever heard it,.

      @JulietsMan@JulietsMan13 күн бұрын
    • @@JulietsManperfect I’ll just make sure to pack my cast iron bathtub next time I’m camping

      @GMAN.12@GMAN.128 күн бұрын
  • If you start the cold water line at 3/4" and step it down to the size going down to the stove. This will create a head pressure that will help the flow greatly.

    @TheCyberRebel@TheCyberRebelАй бұрын
    • Thanks for the tip!

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • The process you're using for "passive heat exchange" is known as percolation which is what coffee makers use, and yes, it's supposed to sound that way and isn't sketchy at all as long as you have your system set up correctly. A good example for percolation hot water setup would be either soft copper tubing or copper flex lines connecting your stove to water storage and at the minimum a 45 elbow on the hot water return to aim the water toward the bottom or side of the bucket instead of allowing it to possibly belch up and out.

    @dragonflowerlogic8883@dragonflowerlogic8883Ай бұрын
  • You can get Thermo Electric Generators that create 12v based on temperature difference. This could power the pump without a battery. If you trying it watch out for the max temperature as is may be to high for some TEG modules.

    @nolansmith99@nolansmith99Ай бұрын
  • Glad you followed up on this after all of the comments. I think an insulated lid on the bucket would help keep the heat in. Some sort of quick hose connections would be ideal for portability. The best use of the DC pump would be for actually using the water as a shower or washing dishes. Some sort of insulating cover around the jerry can or bucket would also maintain the hot water longer in cold weather conditions.

    @anonymous_friend@anonymous_friendАй бұрын
    • You should put some thought into venting for pressure build up if you do this.

      @thefreesoulchannel@thefreesoulchannel15 күн бұрын
  • With even more height difference it will work even better. The one that I saw working this way for a shower had the stove on the floor and the hot water tank overhead for the shower.

    @kensmith5694@kensmith5694Ай бұрын
  • I use a similar setup while camping minus the rocket stove. I use a Harbor Freight transfer pump, some check valves and a bag style shower that I hoist up about 25 ft after the water is heated. It's made it to an extended discharge line with a valve at the shower head end. Works like a charm the bag of since water isn't light. LOL thanks for the video, might have to implement some of these ideas including but not limited to a modified coil

    @WhiteDwarfVR4@WhiteDwarfVR4Ай бұрын
  • Great shear. I was wondering about passive circulation. I so need this setup.

    @frankenstein3163@frankenstein316313 күн бұрын
  • Great test, thanks for sharing your ingenuity!

    @GreatPlainsKayakAngler@GreatPlainsKayakAnglerАй бұрын
  • Enclose the reservoir so pressure can be built on the water. This will increase the boiling temperature. Remember to put an over pressure valve for safety. You could use an automotive coolant reservoir as the cap usually has one of these. I think you could reach 250f. (Also consider the volume of air in this enclose, gasses increase pressure with temperature. That's why your coolant reservoir is never filled to the brim.) The height difference implied does nothing for you since one line will benefits but the other line will equally lose energy.It is better to have short lines to your reservoir to reduce pressuredrop (increase flow). You could also increase the coil diameter slightly so there is more volume of water in the line. I expect it would be less prone to sudden boil. Keep in mind that increasing the diameter will also decrease the flow and do so conservatively.

    @merijn1086@merijn1086Ай бұрын
  • For future testing, to create more water pressure you would need to move the hotline higher than the current position. It’s about a difference in pressure between the lines not how high the bucket is from the stove. Overall this is a sick setup! :) love how clean it looks :)

    @uniaddict@uniaddictАй бұрын
    • Oh nice! I'll try that. Thanks you, I really appreciate it!

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • Ok so.... would this be a valid solution fornpumingnwater short distances if it is not required to be pressurised? It seams like you could use this to trickle feed something for some purpose nit sure what but just seems like a good opportunity for a low maintenance pump?

    @c0veredinash@c0veredinash13 күн бұрын
  • Hi, I really like the idea very much. Actually I will build something simillar for a hot tub. It should heat up by day via absorbers on the roof, and the fire should bring it to the right bathing temperature. Please allow me a few ideas for improvement: 1. A bigger diameter should make a better thermal circulation 2. One valve for the cold water stopping from going back when boiling at the beginning 3. Isolate as much as possible to reduce loss of heat 4. As long as you can make bacon in a pan, you are wasting way to much energy. With your very clever stacable design, you could easily ad another chimney with copper inside. I would guess that at least one or two extra chimneys would work fine. But anyway, while I'm talking theory, you actually build something. Great 🎉

    @andreasmalzer8803@andreasmalzer88032 күн бұрын
  • Thought this was a reupload and was happily surprised with new stuff!

    @kalebbelcher4490@kalebbelcher4490Ай бұрын
    • Yeah I know the thumbnails are similar but didn't really know what to do about it. Thanks for watching tho!

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
    • You could always put something about it being an update in the title or thumbnail. Just a thought@@PatrickRemington

      @kalebbelcher4490@kalebbelcher4490Ай бұрын
  • really nice video and you explained and finished the video which was awsome

    @sshutupurface8345@sshutupurface834520 күн бұрын
  • interesting test, thanks for posting.

    @Chris-ut6eq@Chris-ut6eqАй бұрын
  • Great video! Thanks for doing the testing for us!

    @kimbofan78@kimbofan78Ай бұрын
    • Welcome! Thanks for watching!

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • It might be worth considering this in the light of rhe automobile industry. Early water-cooled car engines used the thermo-siphon effect, which incidentally is why they had tall, narrow radiators. Though this worked on very softly tuned engines, it was soon necessary to add s pump to the setup. As we saw here, with the pump included in the design, it was possible to carry lots more heat away.

    @Del350K4@Del350K4Ай бұрын
    • 🤣 Um have u ever seen early automobiles? Im talking like pre 1830's? Have u every heard of the steam engine? Do u have the faintest notion why its not practical in automobiles? Picture huge craters in the ground where there was once an automobile with a fat boiler and a wood-fueled burner. This is searchable on the Goggles.

      @JulietsMan@JulietsMan13 күн бұрын
    • yes and no. thermosiphon necessitates a casting that includes big, free flowing water passages... whereas forced cooling does not. here, proper design will work thermosiphon... the objective is to heat the water efficiently. the more water, the better. a car wants as little water as possible, as compact as possible... to be made as cheaply as possible... the water is there to dispose of heat, not store it. and yes, as performance goes up, the larger ports, valves, they demand more room, the cooling passages suffer, but theres more heat than ever to deal with... so they throw a pump on. and in the "good old days" they didnt even have decent seals for rotating shafts yet. bit of leather and a gland nut? some graphited asbestos rope? maybe a lead washer? do it up too tight and the shaft overheats and the bearing seizes... early pumps were temperamental! the pump works here because he doesnt have large, free flowing passages for thermosiphon to work properly...

      @paradiselost9946@paradiselost994612 күн бұрын
    • @@paradiselost9946 Thanks for clarifying this : )

      @Del350K4@Del350K411 күн бұрын
  • Sweet thermosyphon bro 🤙🏻

    @mktplyr76@mktplyr76Күн бұрын
  • Good stuff. Love this kind of stuff. Good to know.

    @northjerseykevin3915@northjerseykevin3915Ай бұрын
  • I made a bigger version this with the coils in the flue pipe and a pump to heat my hot tub. It worked fairly well to begin with but due to the condensation formation on the coils it got a huge buildup of soot and creosote resulting in it starting to cause a chimney fire on the coils. Luckily I had a damper to calm things down. But essentially I gave up on the idea. I might revisit it in the future and keep all coils within the fire box.

    @andyarchitect@andyarchitect11 күн бұрын
  • The reason it sound like an old coffee maker is because that it is actually not that dissimilar to how a coffee makers work. The main differences is basically a coffee maker heats the water using a heating element, but uses basically the same principle to pump the water though.

    @g4all205@g4all20510 күн бұрын
  • Great to watch your two videos

    @jaygun43@jaygun43Ай бұрын
  • I'm liking that rocket stove. That's kewl

    @gilbertcammarn874@gilbertcammarn874Ай бұрын
  • Top ! , and the next thing …hook up a boiler and use copper to connect the boiler to the rocket heater ( open inlet for to fill the boiler ) and use thermo sifon to warm up the boiler ( and if you want to add a pump you can use a ( central heating pump ( wilo pump ) Water side pump ( they can stand heat ) Stay creative 👍👍 greetings from 🇳🇱 the netherlands

    @andredejonge5255@andredejonge5255Ай бұрын
  • This may be too late . But I used my copper coil incased in steel welded together and filled with sand. It’s a lot heavier but the sand helps to prevent hot spots . If you try this beware. If the steel gets too hot it will sag due to the pressure of the sand . I ended up using thicker steel and that seems to have helped for the past 6 years or so with mine. I built one 6 years ago with an ammo can . It was an upgraded design from the ammo can stove I made when I was 12-13 back in the mid 90s

    @TAR3N@TAR3NАй бұрын
  • Wow. What a cool setup. I just learn how to weld. I’m going to built me a rocket stove now. I will be looking for stove built video. Thanks

    @TuanLe-ko5rm@TuanLe-ko5rmАй бұрын
    • Thanks! Rocket stoves are a great project for a beginner welder!

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • I'm wondering if it will heat more quickly if the return tube is set higher than the bucket, then using gravity? One option would be to use a taller coil. Or possibly use a box style fill tank having a downslope for cold water and a downslope from the top of the heat exchange back to the tank.

    @jeffragland4529@jeffragland4529Ай бұрын
  • Patrick, I would love to see you build a DIY version of the Kammock Outpost hammock stand, Ive seen your other hammock builds and they are awesome, but the Kammock one is so niche and i would love to see your take on it! (I also think you could make it better, and cheaper than the real thing!)

    @masonk1697@masonk169715 күн бұрын
  • It would be cool to see how much difference there is with insulation around bucket (all sides) and possibly even the tubes. I don't know anything about this technology: it might not matter. Very interesting! I'm exercising on a stationary recumbent bike while working on my computer watching this. I think the gen 3 nuclear reactors use this type of passive heating. That way when the pumps fail at like Fukushima, the water keeps moving. I believe the same can be used with passive air heating from a thermal battery like sand.

    @RiDankulous@RiDankulousАй бұрын
  • If you had a high temperature top hose then couldn't you run the heater at full blast?

    @aussietim7974@aussietim79748 күн бұрын
  • If you insulated the lines and the water container you’ll probably have less heat loss as well which will speed up the process. It would also hold the heat in the water longer. maybe use like one of those YETI bucket coolers instead of a regular 5 gallon bucket and retest. I bet it would work pretty fast with your electric pump set up. Great set up and testing so far though 👍

    @anthonysteward7192@anthonysteward7192Ай бұрын
    • I think even a loosely fitting lid would help, too.

      @alanburdette@alanburdetteАй бұрын
    • Thanks man! I appreciate it!

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • Just as I suggestion you might put a couple short pieces of silicone rubber tubing at the fitting connections or just use all silicon tubing. Silicone tubing has a lot higher temperature rating than vinyl tubing at just over 500 degrees. I have a propane water heater that is a sheet metal box with a burner and a copper coil in it that circulates water the same way to heat the water. I was trying to cook at the same time I was trying to heat water and I wound up melting the vinyl tubing at the fittings. I replace the tubing with silicone and no more problem.

    @fleebee3639@fleebee3639Ай бұрын
  • I wonder if you added a basic mechanical bulb type pump, similar to the type used from gas cans to old outboard motors, attached to the cold supply line that exits the bottom of you water reservoir. That may help eliminate the water from boiling immediately once the fuel source is lit and “jump start” or “prime” the system in the beginning to boost the initial siphoning effect. I’m sure there are scientific words to explain the physics of it. Not positive, but there must be a type of one way valve in those bulb style pumps to maintain fuel pressure until the motor is running and creating enough suction to draw fuel to the motor. I love your idea and follow up video that shows your improvements and using the community to improve your design. Excellent work. Great editing also. I’ve haven’t done much video editing but can assume that it’s time consuming and can make or break a video.

    @jspies22@jspies22Ай бұрын
  • So, based on your numbers, your water heating power is equivalent to an electric heater that puts out ~1.2 kW. For comparison, a heater element on an electric stove typically uses ~1 KW of power. The total energy required to raise your water temp 30.4 °F is: ~1,306,905 J or ~1239 BTUs or ~363 Wh If you were using electricity at 12 ¢/kWh, it would cost you ~4.4 ¢/5 gallons or ~9/10 ¢/gallon. Given that 1 lb of dry white oak has ~6.4 million BTUs of energy in it, you are converting a very small amount of energy from 1 lb of wood for your water heating. If you keep track of the mass of the wood before & after the water reaches your ideal temp, you can even determine how efficient your wood heater is.

    @ab_ab_c@ab_ab_c10 күн бұрын
  • Chimney damper would help control the heat some. For those that don't know why you would do this, try camping with no hot water. And no, not in an RV, but in a tent. Some hoses , a coil, and a dakota fire pit would do just fine in the woods.

    @billk9628@billk962811 күн бұрын
  • Can't see the problem with the water boiling on the second attempt, it's not pressurised so not sketchy?

    @macducati2304@macducati230413 күн бұрын
  • For the pump, you might try to use a thermopile or Peltier block. It may not run the pump quickly but might be enough to where you are not reliant on electricity. Great video; keep up the experiments!

    @SpinStar1956@SpinStar1956Ай бұрын
    • How about making a very simple steam engine like system. When the water in the heat exchanger boils it shoots the water out. When the pressure in the heat exchanger drops cold water comes into the bottom. Basically it just needs a larger diameter section at the bottom of the heat exchanger.

      @kensmith5694@kensmith5694Ай бұрын
  • Superb,regards from England

    @tonybennett3904@tonybennett3904Ай бұрын
  • Temp sensor on bottom and top would work well. Use micro controller to gather data.

    @satrah101@satrah10118 күн бұрын
  • I would change the setup a little by using a flat water tank, and use braided hoses at the final stages of the water tank prototype

    @RMDZ019@RMDZ019Ай бұрын
  • is there a build guide to your rocket stove?

    @TipsyRavenSailing@TipsyRavenSailingАй бұрын
  • Probably to get the most flow you output back into the bucket should be above the water line. This makes the output go back to atmosphere and not under water and have to push against the weight of the water

    @TheYoyojamer@TheYoyojamer12 күн бұрын
  • Great video! Now I'm going to watch a video of paint drying...maybe watch some videos of grass growing!

    @odinata@odinataАй бұрын
    • That’s funny.. did someone force you watch it? You might like the build video better.

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • Insulate your water container, side, top and bottom. Something as simple as wrapping it in a 99c Mylar space blanket will make a HUGE difference in heat gain and heat retention.

    @texasprepperprojects@texasprepperprojectsАй бұрын
    • Yeah definitely!

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • I belive you need to have one line higher than the other so it circulates

    @user-dk3ih5ok6k@user-dk3ih5ok6kАй бұрын
  • What if you had two buckets top one to collect the hot water with a overflow into the cold bucket 🤔 that way you would get hot water not just at the top

    @P8FPV@P8FPV20 күн бұрын
  • I think a few point the thermometer at the bottom of the bucket you would get the temperature difference between top and bottom

    @josephrheaume8386@josephrheaume8386Ай бұрын
  • If you're looking at a 40 min shower as an example. You would need 60,000 btu for 80 to 100 gallons. A normal 80-gallon shower would use a little over 7 lbs hard season wood per shower maybe 10 lbs. This in return is a 40 min shower. The only drawback is it would take under normal operating conditions about 4 hours to heat the water of 100 gallons. If you had or made a pellet maker you could use anything for fuel. Also, if the water is strong enough with the heat you could run a small water generator by creating a strong current. The only worry I could think of besides lazy people could be potentially melting the Cooper coil. This a fun experiment for convention heating, but if you scale it up think of safety ( don't burn down your home or garage.)

    @thefreesoulchannel@thefreesoulchannel15 күн бұрын
  • If its for showering, why not just have the heated water run to a seperate container so it doesnt have to mix with cold water and can be used faster? Then have a bucket that you can set in a stream or river that pulls "infinite" water to be heated. Anyhow, cool video.

    @arctiformgames@arctiformgames15 күн бұрын
  • What makes this free exactly. Last i checked, currency represents an exchange of time at the end of the day.

    @marioncobretti7870@marioncobretti78704 күн бұрын
  • should insulate the buckets by winding some insulation around it.

    @bogganalseryd2324@bogganalseryd232414 күн бұрын
  • For the passive system, you need the bucket to be higher

    @BillYoung-nx9kc@BillYoung-nx9kc20 күн бұрын
  • maybe the lines need to be longer. maybe the lines need to be aimed down. I'm not sure, because I assumed the plastic would melt based on the boiling.

    @WoetotheVanquished@WoetotheVanquished16 күн бұрын
  • The passive system should have the bucket about six feet above the stove. This will also allow you to get a shower by gravity.

    @hughmanatee7433@hughmanatee7433Ай бұрын
  • What would happen if the line returning to the reservoir was slightly larger in diameter than the supply? Or vice versa.

    @oldfarmer9004@oldfarmer9004Ай бұрын
    • If I were to do anything different it would probably be that. I’m working on a video now where the copper will wrap around the outside of the chimney but I upped the side of the copper and hoses.

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • coiled pipe is fine if you want a flash steam boiler? you only have a small volume of water entering, can only absorb so much heat before boiling... you cant get the flow rate with thermosiphon in that small a diameter to prevent boiling... a water _heater_ is most efficient when water leaves with only a very LOW temperature rise! and the flame temperature after the heat exchanger should be equal to the water temperature... all the heat being absorbed to the point that the absorber is now heating the exhaust... you should be able to put your hand over it ;) almost all the heat is being absorbed, and its heating a large amount of water a small amount. a water _boiler_ is most efficient when the water and exhaust is half the _combustion_ temperature. in this case the goal is to get the highest temperature, in the maximum amount of water. if the water/exhaust is less than half the combustion temp, you are absorbing too much, and the steam could be hotter... if its more than half, you arent absorbing enough, the water flow could be higher. youre heating less water to a higher temperature... if you wanted the highest temperature possible, equal to combustion temperature... you can only absorb a small amount. none, in fact. lots of surface area. lots of flame contact. lots of water flow. go chat up a plumber, try and get some large diameter copper pipe offcuts...(scrapyards?) 4 inch, 5 inch... cross drill the smaller piece for say, 10mm pipe, in a helical pattern... slight angle helps. you want as much flame interaction as possible, and to maintain as much water flow as possible. with as much surface area as possible.... no hot spots! bit of sheet for end caps or cough up for fabricated adaptors... if you hunt around theres even tee reducers, but they arent cheap. especially at large diameters! saves drilling holes for the inlets/outlets? solder her all up. if you dont ever get it over boiling temps, you can use soft solder... dont run it dry. for thermosiphon to work really well, you need large diameters, very easy flow path. and yeah, heat source ideally is halfway between inlet and outlet on the tank/radiator. think of convection currents in a pot of boiling water... big loops! heat, rise, cool, descend... easy! it doesnt like restricted flow... i made a small one, 28/40mm for my diesel heater? gets all that heat from the exhaust and into a big drum of water... shame its brain died last year and its almost winter again... brrr. stupid electronics. rocket stove dont need no electronics.

    @paradiselost9946@paradiselost994612 күн бұрын
  • It would be interesting to see a small solar and water pump setup for another test. Just for giggles.

    @Summit900@Summit900Ай бұрын
  • If you use copper pipes going from stove to bucket u could heat it alot faster

    @Ausomeoutdoors@Ausomeoutdoors19 күн бұрын
  • Build a larger one for a bath tub

    @outforbeer@outforbeer2 күн бұрын
  • 10:19 cool view

    @jlbminestine698@jlbminestine698Ай бұрын
  • To many variables to come to any kind of conclusion. The only suggestion I can make is that larger bore pipes move more water quicker, which helps up to a certain size to heat the water faster but then more fuel needs adding. So without testing lots of different variables of pipe sizes, amount of fuel added, volume of water, just accept that burning wood heats up water 👍

    @deangriffiths8107@deangriffiths810713 күн бұрын
  • You could try using copper tubing instead of plastic.

    @BigChristopher@BigChristopherАй бұрын
  • Could you use a Peltier module to power a water pump with the fire instead of a battery and get the best of both worlds?

    @gd.ritter@gd.ritter13 күн бұрын
    • yes. no. peltiers are fiddly. they like constant temperature, and ideal load. really hard to keep a fireplace at a constant temperature! and within rated temps, of course... i was playing around with a stove top one, got to the point of having water cooling and yeah, iunno. PC radiator i ordered got destroyed by the postie, so um... i never finished it. probably get back to it as winter draws near, lol... but was happily driving a 12v DC motor with a 12x6 prop, making a decent breeze! i think i needed four though? maybe six? did destroy plenty of modules? the colder you can keep the cold side, the harder you can run them...

      @paradiselost9946@paradiselost994612 күн бұрын
    • @@paradiselost9946 If you had a connection to it like the water cooling blocks used in computers, you could have the cold water flow via the cold side of the peltier and the hot water on the opposite side with a block also. Then the bigger the temperature difference the more power it'll output to equalize the temp. but i'm not experienced with them and how good/poor this would operate. sounds like a fun experiment though.

      @gd.ritter@gd.ritter11 күн бұрын
    • @@gd.ritter thats sort of what i ended up doing? PC radiator on stand supporting fan. get up away from heat... water tank base, peltiers bolted on side. as long as theres water, its limited to 100C... i guess if one was fancy with different metals and expansion rates you could make it self regulating? just lift off the heat source when over a set temp. really want to push to 130C, maybe 150. whatever. heat block to radiator, pump. had enough power. ordered a bigger radiator and yeah.... i mentioned a destructive postie?

      @paradiselost9946@paradiselost99469 күн бұрын
  • The tub of water needs to be higher than you have it, which is almost level so will not flow as well.

    @spiderswebs11@spiderswebs113 күн бұрын
  • Check valve

    @dominicb405@dominicb405Ай бұрын
  • Heat rises. If you plum both lines near the bottom…return line only a couple inches above. The hot water will naturally go to the top.

    @noahgrady3628@noahgrady3628Ай бұрын
  • You might want to change you iPhone PIN...showing it in your video is not improving your device security ;-) @ 9:17

    @2eck@2eck10 күн бұрын
  • Will be interesting to see that with a thermal camera.

    @mattmaloney5988@mattmaloney5988Ай бұрын
    • I thought about getting one for this but they are pretty expensive.

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • put bucket up high, the cold water will be forced through stove and back into bucket. .......you are almost there...dont give up yet

    @user-dk3ih5ok6k@user-dk3ih5ok6kАй бұрын
  • 😅 Don't forget plumber propane torch 😮

    @josegardead8946@josegardead8946Ай бұрын
  • Works. But not for free by any stretch of the imagination.

    @JulietsMan@JulietsMan13 күн бұрын
  • Add a check valve.

    @WiggglezMr@WiggglezMrАй бұрын
    • It doesn't really need one

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
    • @@PatrickRemington its a 5$ part that does more then you think.

      @WiggglezMr@WiggglezMrАй бұрын
    • @@PatrickRemington with a check valve you could run the fire much hotter and heat the water quicker, because water boiling in the coil would simply decrease the pressure after the check valve and draw more cool water into the coil

      @Hephera@HepheraАй бұрын
    • No check valves needed in these setups, thermo siphon will do the job. We used to run a 60 litre drum with some copper off to one side, couple of coils in the fire and return line near the top of the drum, feed line near the bottom. Just keep the drum topped up. This is a really neat set up.

      @michaelsimpson9779@michaelsimpson9779Ай бұрын
  • Heat always Rises.

    @MichaelMiller-op8fe@MichaelMiller-op8fe10 күн бұрын
  • "Free" hot water by making a fire, keeping the fire going and waiting for everything to heat up.

    @Unleashed75@Unleashed7511 күн бұрын
  • I only saw the short version.

    @user-rr5wf9ju5u@user-rr5wf9ju5uАй бұрын
  • Would be better to make a boiler style

    @jamesguiberteau6607@jamesguiberteau660719 күн бұрын
  • It's called a gravity system we've been installing that type of system before electricity hot water goes up in the top and is the water cooled down it comes down in the bottom it's not passive it's called gravity

    @davidgentz1731@davidgentz1731Ай бұрын
    • It's whatever you want to call it because it does not matter but a thermosyphon is a method of passive heat exchange

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • I used a 20 gallon hot water tank and hooked up 2 solar panels in series and water gets to average of 130-145... The top was close to 200 F

    @michaeld4502@michaeld4502Ай бұрын
    • What happens if it does get over 212f

      @Bryan-Hensley@Bryan-HensleyАй бұрын
    • ​@@Bryan-HensleyI was trying to use this to heat a tiny home... So it will never get to 212.... Tank was stripped of insulation and painted black... The cold on the bottom never exceed 130-140 even in dead of winter with max sun could not heat enough need much more capacity of tank and panels .... But ran 6 months

      @michaeld4502@michaeld4502Ай бұрын
    • Does it work at 10pm?

      @csengo70@csengo7019 күн бұрын
  • Just a thought, you might want to change the passcode on your phone. 😂 9:16 in video

    @PlayscBricks@PlayscBricksАй бұрын
    • 😂😂😂 caught me slackin’ on the editing

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • thanks for sharing your pin 😅

    @paul974c@paul974c8 күн бұрын
  • The thumbnail says free hot water. Where can I get the equipment and material to burn for free?

    @RyeMoes@RyeMoesАй бұрын
    • Sticks are generally free

      @nateb4543@nateb454318 күн бұрын
    • ​@@nateb4543Oh ok, it looked like custom metal work with tubing, fittings, etc. Didn't realize it was made from stick.

      @RyeMoes@RyeMoes18 күн бұрын
  • Close the system, it's not gunna work right without pressure pushing that water down, u can't see it

    @SsDiBoi@SsDiBoi16 күн бұрын
  • Brings me back to elementary 🤦🏽‍♂️

    @206robert206@206robert206Ай бұрын
  • You used electricity to pump the water which I think is a vital step in this process...

    @user-rr5wf9ju5u@user-rr5wf9ju5uАй бұрын
    • You didn’t watch the whole video bud..

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
  • You connected your Water Pump to your passive output line; you should connect it to your passive input line to reduce the wear on your pump and increase your thermal exchange efficiency. Cold enters the heat exchange from the bottom, not the top, you were sending cold in the top and out the bottom; you were resisting the thermal exchange and reducing how much heat you could siphon from the burning fuel as a result. You could connect the two lines closer together to increase your available thermal mass; the water is acting like a thermal battery, and the fire is replenishing that thermal battery's thermal energy, but due to how ineffective your thermal containment system is, your thermal battery is hemorrhaging thermal energy; usually, you will want insulated transport lines to reduce thermal loss, this is usually in the form of Copper Lines wrapped in Rubber or Foam, possibly with PVC pipe around that to add more insulation. The reason behind using copper lines revolves around the water reaching ~100 °C, and how effectively the material is able to withstand that temperature in extensive exposure without degrading the containment material. I understand why you used a clear line to record and scientifically diagnose your system, but I explained why those other options are used so you can understand what might happen with the system in the future, and how to fix what breaks. You do want to keep the Cold Water retrieval line lower than the hot water output line on the bucket/container side, you got that right; cold water can absorb heat easier than hot water, so grabbing from lower than the hot output line is a smart idea.

    @BlueNEXUSGaming@BlueNEXUSGamingАй бұрын
    • I can edit this post later from my Laptop if I can find it again, that is easier to do if someone comments on my comment.

      @BlueNEXUSGaming@BlueNEXUSGamingАй бұрын
  • 7515 eyy?? lol not like that matters XD

    @kitsurubami@kitsurubamiАй бұрын
    • I'm not sure what that means

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonАй бұрын
    • @@PatrickRemington your phone unlock code

      @kitsurubami@kitsurubamiАй бұрын
  • Copper lines

    @How2freedom@How2freedom6 күн бұрын
  • You mean make water flow without electricity not making hot water without electricity that's silly

    @davidgentz1731@davidgentz1731Ай бұрын
  • It's cool and all, but I can just boil some water and dip a cloth into it to bathe without wasting as much water or set up. We call this overengineering.

    @majesticslug3399@majesticslug3399Күн бұрын
    • Nah, that's just your opinion. For some a thermosyphon rocket stove setup could be beneficial. It may be over engineered for you but could work great for others.🤯

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemingtonКүн бұрын
  • peltier cell +pump (+charging your phone, power bank, etc)

    @sdj8368@sdj8368Ай бұрын
    • Those are HIGHLY inefficient, the ones you seen commercially are mostly a battery pack that get VERY slowly trickle fed. You'd need to run one for days to charge a phone if you even can without it being turned off.

      @SilvaDreams@SilvaDreamsАй бұрын
    • @@SilvaDreamsAlthough inefficient, if it uses otherwise wasted heat off the side of the stove it doesn't matter how efficient it is. One large 12v unit could power the pump and save the need for a battery.

      @nolansmith99@nolansmith99Ай бұрын
  • you just need to get the air out of the pipes

    @lazygames6387@lazygames638712 күн бұрын
    • You mean the water that has turned into steam?

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemington12 күн бұрын
  • You need a one way valve on each line to keep the water moving.

    @user-nj3dd5cx8l@user-nj3dd5cx8lАй бұрын
  • I have a solar water heater that heats my water without any need for refueling. I have an electric element that keeps it hot at night, or when the sun isn't enough to maintain setpoint.

    @charlieodom9107@charlieodom910722 күн бұрын
    • Nice!

      @PatrickRemington@PatrickRemington22 күн бұрын
  • You will get better circulation if you use larger pipes. Just like the old heating systems used to do.

    @catscankill@catscankillАй бұрын
  • i dont see nothing free on this video

    @benzotekk@benzotekk2 күн бұрын
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