Going in another direction than I had planned today.
Got the blade on the tractor and am clearing and leveling in several places. Main one being around the bamboo thicket. Been trying to get to it for several years and the ground is just right now to rip the privit out by the roots so am taking a day and doing the tractor thingie…
More later.
Going to upgrade the WordPress install to 2.0 so the place will probably be down for a bit.
My brother found this tool the other day and is wondering what it is/was used for.

He says in the email:
It is solid steel. Chisel on the right end. Hammer head and single pick on the left. Overall it is about 9″ long. From pick to hammer head it is about 2 1/4″. The lettering on the handle says “DASCO 399”.
Any help/info would be apprecaited.
Paxton and Whitfield exceptional cheese since 1797
Not planning to order any, but one can look, can’t one?
Gifts and Gadgets
For those who have everything?
Baking Biscuits in an Adirondack Wilderness Camp (Backcountry vacation cabin).
The scones are good too. 🙂
Update – Friend asked me what this post was about so guess at a quick glance it’s not making the much sense. So here’s an explaination. 😉
This is a link to a site with a good “from scratch” biscuit recipe. There is also a recipe for english butter scones which I have made and though the self-rising flour I subsituted was bad (and has been throuily spanked for being “that” bad), the scones turned out rather good, though somewhat flat. Will use good flour and more milk next time.
CNC Machining Craftsman—Clen Tomlinson
This link from Steve a while back. Just getting to posting it.
This dude has gone just a bit beyond anything I have ever thought possible in a model. Truly wonderful work!
Just downloaded a new browser, by the name of Flock that has built in blogging capability. Not sure about it but thought that I would give it a try.
Now to see if it posts to the blog properly.
Been trying to stay warm is about all here. Course been having to put up blueboard and finish some things to do that.
Got the duct installed into the trailer and up to within a foot of the ceiling in the aerie, with a fan sitting on top blowing down. Helps cool this area and warms the trailer nicely. Once the thermal mass wall is done and separates the greenhouse from the common room and aerie, I think the temperature will be easier to maintain too.
Had a brain spasm just now concerning the thermal mass wall. Wondering about putting a couple of water heater tanks in the wall and using them in a separate solar/geothermal heating/cooling system. Separate from the woodburning heater that is. And I can always install a set of coils in one of the bells of the stove when additional btu’s are needed too. With a line to the creek (which I keep thinking about) and a small pump I can cool the wall in the summer also. Gonna have to rethink a lot of this. Knew there was some reason I quit working on it when I did…
About figured out the new heaters operational habits. No real creosote stink in several days and have achieved top temps of 375 f as of this am so am going to call it workable. Still need to move it. But to do that I need to reconfigure the inside of the greenhouse and put in shelves and do a lot of things that I have been putting off. Guess its time to do them though cause I can’t start on the newer, bigger, better, faster, stronger heater till I get this one moved…
Update and clarification of the top temp of 375. This is the temperature as measured with an oven thermometer sitting on top of the stove 4 inches in front of the flue. I’ve found that if I can get it to 300 at this point that the smoke clears up and mostly heatwaves are emitting from the chimney.
Will try to get to other things like backed up email sometime today…
Days mixed together again. Been feeling rough for several days. Since new years I guess. Not getting much done either.
Did get the new test heater fired off this morning. Seems to do a great job. Wish I had built it inside and permeant now. Fired off for the first time the other day to start the drying. Then it rained a couple of times (i think) and I have been down so haven’t tried it again till today. Extended the firebox opening a bit with half a two hole 8 inch cement block, some brick and more mud. Makes feeding it easier and I think I am going to go with an extended firebox on the one I build in here too.
And again thought I had posted this. Sorry…
Tolkien Society: 2006 birthday toast index
30 minutes (or less) left.
Here’s to “The Professor”!
Got down to 24.8 here last night. Not sure what time. Was at 25.2 at 6:15 when I got the fire going and came up to look. Inside was 48.6. 9:06 and we are at 35.4 outside and 64.8 inside.
Heater works fine, just not the way I am used to one working. No instant heat. Takes a while for the firebrick to heat up. Have the top at 150 now. The temp in the stack of brick on top is over 160 at the front and haven’t tested around back. Need to see if herrington would loan or sell me the temp gun. If not need to just buy one.
Rethinking the heater bell a bit.
Thought I had already posted this. Sorry for the delay. Will continue the thought in a new post.
So today I rebuilt the inside of it again. This time without taking the hot coals out first… 😉
Got a pair of my blacksmithing tongs and got ALL the firebrick out of the stove. The still using the tongs grabbed the metal flame shield and rotated it until it would come out the door. Took it outside to cool. Then used a shovel to move all of the coals and ashes to one side. Put in a couple of firebrick in the middle of the bottom. Then two more on the right. Two more above them and once again two more. Then moved the coals and ashes to the bricks. And did the left side with firebrick the same as the right. Put several across the back and wedged a couple upright on the back side corners. Went to the barn and cut a couple of pieces of half inch thinwall conduit, flattened the ends and using the bender curved them to match the inside of the stove. Bent the ends at right angles to the outside of the curve and after coming back up here put them in under the top row of brick on the sides with the curve facing up. Then put (forced) firebrick between the conduit and the metal of the body of the heater.
Removed the ells and tees and all of the pipe. Gonna have to work out a way to introduce more air into the firebox. Will probably cut the door and add a slide or rotary air control. in the bottom of it.
Built a fire. Still smokey. Flue is too long. Gotta figure out a shorter way to vent it. Outside of the heater is much cooler so far but all of the firebrick will take a while to heat.
Been studying the stuff at http://www.stove.ru/index.php?lng=1 some more and it’s starting to make sense now. I am going to try to graft the top bell of OIK 14 to the top of this stove. Not the same exact thing as I am going to use a metal pipe for the top exhaust instead of using brick and am going to make it larger than shown in the drawing. But I think the basic design will work fine and give a LOT of added heat storage. Looks like it will take somewhere around 100 brick but I could be off by 20 or 30 either way. Built a mock up of it on the floor with brick but tore it down to reline the heater and failed to count the brick as I took it apart.
Okay, rebuilt it on some erector shelving material that I bolted together on top of the stove. Or 12 rows of it anyway. Just around the flue to see how it would sit. I think it will work fine. I am going to try to build the shell while the heater is going and then remove the flue, put the bricks in the bottom and put the pipe in, connect back to the top and fire it off again. I know that isn’t the way you are supossed to do it but we have no other heat so gonna have to make do. If necessary I can build a metal case around the outside of the brick bell to make sure it doesn’t smoke. After thinking on it a bit I think that dry stacking the brick with a case around it may be the best way to go.
Cleaned out the ashes and coals this afternoon and then removed the firebrick. Then the sand. Put in two pieces of 1 inch pipe, that I had drilled 3/8 inch holes every inch for a total of 12 holes in one side of each pipe, into the end of the ell and tee inside the firebox. Then put a broken off piece of firebrick between the ends of the pipe furtherest away from the inlet. Put firebrick on the outside of each pipe from the front to the back on each side. Added firebrick across the two pipes while leaving a half inch space between each one for ashes to fall through. This leaves a opening between the air inlet pipes and under the log support firebrick for ash to accumulate and air to get to the wood and coals.
After I got it all back in place sifted the coals and charcoal out of the ashes and put them back on top of the firebrick in the bottom of the stove. Added some dry stuff and cedar pieces and then larger logs after it got to going again. Will see if it is an improvement or not. Smokes worse but seems to be hotter. Will see…
Several advances to report on the house building front.
Stove is working fine. Still gets a bit smokey in here when loading sometimes but I am learning it’s ways. Added a inner smoke shield flap in the top of the door and cut down on most of the smoke. There are two times I get smoke coming out into the room now. One is when I open the door all the way without stopping at about an inch to allow the chamber to clear first. The other is when loading it and not having all the wood right there to put in quickly. If all the wood is put in before the first has a chance to start smoking we are fine but if I only get one piece and put in then get another and another the first is smoking and some of it gets out. No biggie and I will make a instruction sheet for the thing if I have to but I think most of the problem is me.
Also added a layer of firebrick to the outside of the firebox. Just stacked on there for now as I have other ideas to try heating wise from some stuff I have been reading at http://www.stove.ru/index.php?lng=1 which throws a lot of what I have been doing totally out of the picture.
Was looking at masonry heaters a couple of years ago (or more) and wanted to try something but the time wasn’t right. Got this place built enough now to try again. With the addition of the “free (natural) gas movement” design I think I can build a heater of junk water heaters, rock and cement that will still have the energy efficiency of the masonry heaters. Firebrick for the combustion chamber and a clay and cement mix for the flue walls. Water heaters cut off for the heat exchange hoods. Use cardboard to space the rock and cement away from the metal so there is an expansion joint between the two. Going to try it anyway. Of course the stove I just built is right where I want to build this one. So will have to move it I guess. Such is life in an experiment…
The beam I alluded to in the title is the center support beam under the second floor that I am presently on. I added a couple of cedar posts for support on either side of the stove platform and will build the rock and cement up and around them as I build the heater but for now figured more support couldn’t hurt. Got to looking at another one that I wanted to use for the support beam and as the chainsaw was already out decided to cut it and see how much trimming I would have to do to the top. Cut one section off the large end for a west side support post and notched the top 5.5 inches down and half the diameter which was 8 inches. Put the beam on the supports and tried to use a chalk line to level my cut to but there are too many limbs sticking out on this piece to do it and it is crooked to boot. So set my head to level and cut the side level. trimmed the large end square on 3 sides to fit the notch on the post. Found the wood mizer blade for the sawsall and cut a notch out of the second floor/stair support post next to the trailer to fit the small end. Got the 13+ foot long beam inside by my self. Used the handtrucks and tied either one end or the other to them as I maneuvered it in over and around things… Got one end up on the 7 foot step ladder and was fixing to put the other end in when Bill came by so got him to help me get it in and then the second floor jacked up and the other end put in place. The second floor is MUCH more stable now.
With the post on the west side in place we now have a larger area for the bathroom. Already moved the walls some. Course the walls are sheets of blueboard. Door is a bedspread hung on a piece of bamboo. But it’s getting better.
Had Cat get a indoor/outdoor thermometer yesterday. Now I can tell just how much colder it is here than at the official Weaver reporting station. Last night we were 7 degrees colder than it was reporting. Had thought so but now I know…
Getting more of the blueboard up. Got 3 pieces on the aerie ceiling so far. 3 more to go but those have got to have additional support which means cutting plastic and then reattaching it. Warm enough today to do but hands and arms are giving me fits so may just take it easy instead.
For those of you following these exploits I thought I would put down some of yesterdays doings.
First off, the stove works! Needs more air with damp or green wood but with good dry wood does a great job. Took a while to get the brick and sand dried out but once the moisture was out of there it took off and went the entire night with just two feedings and I only put in a couple of logs each time. I think if I had filled it with dry stuff it would have gone all night without a problem. Let the Ashley go out and the heat is still holding inside here fine. Course it is only about 20 degrees cooler outside than in instead of trying to keep a 40 to 50 degree differential so only time and colder weather will tell.
Got a couple of pieces of old roofing and cut holes for the pipe in the center of each. One is a piece of 5v and the other is the 3 foot wide stuff. the 5v went inside the south end of the greenhouse at the top. Added a couple of 2×4’s, one on each side of the opening for side attachment and screwed the metal down on all 4 sides. Put the flue pipe in for a test fit and moved the stove (sucker is heavy with the brick and sand in it too!) to get the best alignment. have a nice rise to the pipe so maybe it will draw right. Put all the seams on the top so won’t get creosote running out and dripping. Made the mistake of putting the seams down on my first stove, my thinking being that the smoke wouldn’t get out that way. WRONG way to do it!. Anyway got the pipe back out and screwed it together at each joint with 3 1/2 inch metal screws. Put it back in and then went outside and put on the other metal. No triple wall here but as far from the stove and any wood as the flue is I think we are okay.
Then got some 12 foot long shelving angle and a few pieces of shorter stuff and some bolts and nuts. drove 2 pieces of the short stuff into the ground under the pipe and then bolted the 12 foot stuff to them. Added a short cross brace under the pipe and then put on the last ell and about 10 feet of flue pipe with a rain cap on top. Another cross brace on the outside of the flue at the top and then a quick wrap with steel wire and its done.
Back inside and newspaper and a couple of cedar twigs and the fire is going. Added more stuff and it kept growing and drying the brick and sand. It will need another air intake. Guess I will take the door off, drill some holes and make a turn or slide draft control there. Once it is going the 1 1/2 inch pipe air inlet is fine but with the 24+ feet of flue (!) along with the 2 ells is just too much back restriction for the small diameter inlet, especially with wet or green wood. Once it dries out it’s fine.
To cook, perchance to eat. Got to get at it.
Merry Happy to all!