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10 Responses to “Adventures with the Rocket Stove”

  1. Marupa says:

    Hi DV,

    Very interesting. One question though. I have seen pot based stoves in my village when I was a kid ( about 25 yrs ago)but they were open and not rocket science ( i mean rocket stove technique).

    How do you handle the issue of ashes accumulating from burnt out firewood? did you face that issue?

    May a ‘pushin - pullout’ removable base layer underneath the vertical shaft separated by a steel grill collect all the ashes that can be removed ?

  2. dv says:

    yes marupa…
    a rough brush draws the ash out on to a tray. the ash is used as fertiliser and scrub powder for cleaning up pots

  3. chandrakant says:

    Hi DV
    May ramalingam and his folks have busy schedule. I had seen stoves made from tin with a small hole near bottom and centrally packed with husk being used. its cost was about 40Rs 30 years back but only packing husk was a skilled issue. may this news spread to many in our myriad villages. thannx

  4. sujatha says:

    dear sir,
    with reference to efficient wood burning stoves,have you heard about the sarala ole and the astra ole?there is some information regarding them here -
    http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/oct102004/926.pdf
    http://www.teri.res.in/terragreen/issue42/feature.htm
    http://www.tide-india.org/products/06household-cooking-stoves.html
    http://www.pciaonline.org/files/Proceedings/2007IndiaProceedings/pdf/1.8%20Srinivas.pdf
    what do you think about them as compared to the rocket stove?
    warm regards,
    sujatha

  5. Marupa says:

    DV,

    Now that you have solved the problem of cooking, am sure you must be working on how to preserve what has been cooked.

    Check this out, this idea can be improved by you and applied in pointreturn am sure.

    http://permaculture.org.au/2008/08/11/a-refrigerator-that-runs-without-electricity/

    Best.

  6. dv says:

    sujatha…
    stoves achieve freedom from smoke by ensuring sufficient updraft, which makes plenty of air for combustion available. how do they manage that is the issue. the designs you have flagged use tall chimneys, which are good if they are affordable.
    then comes replicability at user level.
    evaluated from these points of view, pointReturn’s pottery Rocket Stove appears to have some advantages
    -dv

  7. dv says:

    marupa…
    pot-in-pot refrigeration works best when humidity is low, unlike at pointReturn
    -dv

  8. sujatha says:

    dear sir,
    regarding the fuel for the stove,since firewood has been a cause of deforestation,what do you think of biomass briquettes made by simple machines ,with locally available materials?can making briquettes and simple briquette making machines, also help in providing some income to villagers or urban slum dwellers?
    http://www.youtube.com/user/BeavertonRotary
    http://www.gorpproductions.com/fostvideo.html
    warm regards,
    sujatha

  9. dv says:

    sujatha…
    firewood remains the fuel for a majority of india’s poor. one is better off reducing the quantities used and making them smoke free. that’s what rocket stoves do. in any case, use of twigs and brushwood found in neighbourhoods is quite sustainable.
    briquettes are a good route too but they need a centralised unit and some manufacturing skill. they’d certainly be wonderful if they are easily available everywhere, which they are not. till that catches on efficient smoke free stoves seem a good bet
    -dv

  10. varaahan says:

    Sure I would like to get one such rocket stove.
    I am in Chennai.

    varaahan@rediffmail.com

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