55 gallon drum ideas

   / 55 gallon drum ideas #33  
What exactly are you getting for 39 bucks?

Just the 'add on' or top barrel kit (barrel & heat resistant paint not included)

The bottom kit is US$50 (barrel & heat resistant paint not included)

Neither includes a flue from what I can see. Still, it looks like a spiffy project for a well ventilated space.
 
   / 55 gallon drum ideas #34  
You also can get them at Northern Tool. I've never seen the two barrel stove work, but regular barrel stoves used to be popular. They are very inefficient heaters and the barrels don't tend to last very long; but if you have a lot of junk wood and want to heat your work area cheaply they are a good way to go.
 
   / 55 gallon drum ideas #35  
My grandfather and I built a really good one about 30 years ago. The trick is to start with two of the heavy 55 gallon drums. We looked for quite awhile back then to find them. The heavy wall drums weigh about 2-3 times what a regular steel drum weighs and the ones we used were galvanized if I remember correctly. When finished, we set it up outside and built the biggest fire we could in it (supplemented with some diesel fuel) to burn off everything that would burn off.
What made this stove work well was we cut 4 and half inch round holes in the top and bottom of the upper drum and inserted seven 4” (schedule 80 I think) heavy wall pipes and welded them in to seal the drum back up.
Then once installed in the shop, put a squirrel fan blower behind it to blow air through the tubes in the barrel. Basically it was a drum sized version of one of these.
IMG_0009.JPG
This stove was installed in a 5000 sqft shop with 16’ to the bottom of the open rafters, so the exposed flue inside the shop was over 20’ with another 6’ exposed on the roof so it still drafted very well.
It mostly burned scraps and sawdust from the table saw but when it was below freezing, a wheelbarrow full of fire wood would bring it up to 60 degrees in the shop in a couple hours. It was not hard to get that bottom barrel glowing, so the fans were almost necessary to keep it from warping. I don’t know how well the thin barrels would last with that kind of heat.
 
   / 55 gallon drum ideas #36  
You also can get them at Northern Tool. I've never seen the two barrel stove work, but regular barrel stoves used to be popular. They are very inefficient heaters and the barrels don't tend to last very long; but if you have a lot of junk wood and want to heat your work area cheaply they are a good way to go.

Many years ago, I used a two barrel stove setup in a two bedroom house with attached garage and it heated the entire house. This was during the winter with snow on the ground.

I lined the bottom barrel with sand and a layer of fire brick to prevent burn through and a steel fire grate to keep the logs elevated. That contraption saved me a lot of money on heating oil - which is what the house was set up with at the time.
 
   / 55 gallon drum ideas #37  
Many years ago, I used a two barrel stove setup in a two bedroom house with attached garage and it heated the entire house. This was during the winter with snow on the ground.

I lined the bottom barrel with sand and a layer of fire brick to prevent burn through and a steel fire grate to keep the logs elevated. That contraption saved me a lot of money on heating oil - which is what the house was set up with at the time.


I was in a shop with a barrel stove years ago and they had thin fire brick on the bottom that went partway up the side. Lots of fires in it and I don't recall the barrel ever burning out. That stove really threw the heat.
 
   / 55 gallon drum ideas #38  
I was in a shop with a barrel stove years ago and they had thin fire brick on the bottom that went partway up the side. Lots of fires in it and I don't recall the barrel ever burning out. That stove really threw the heat.

Many years ago, I used a two barrel stove setup in a two bedroom house with attached garage and it heated the entire house. This was during the winter with snow on the ground.

I lined the bottom barrel with sand and a layer of fire brick to prevent burn through and a steel fire grate to keep the logs elevated. That contraption saved me a lot of money on heating oil - which is what the house was set up with at the time.
Lining them does help. Most of the units I had ever seen were just the barrels. There also might have been some old engine oil burned also, perhaps even dirty oily rags when they were past their useful stage.
 
   / 55 gallon drum ideas #39  
They make dandy shop heaters with a double drum kit.

View attachment 545759


Drum Kits

Double Barrel Adaptor Kits Note: These often picture the main drum kit but are just the legs and flange adapters to stack a second drum.

Built one and used it in my shop for years then donated it to a hunting camp. At the camp we bent a piece of expanded metal to make a flat surface on the top. We would place a venison roast on top in a baking bag in a pot in the morning and it would be just right by lunch.

Edit: Just saw the Walmart link MossRoad posted and it looks to be better pricing. His link is for the stack kit but the drum kit also came up in the suggestions at top. You need BOTH pieces to make a stacked drum heater. Drum + Stack Kit
 
   / 55 gallon drum ideas #40  
I also saw one with a blower on it like 3Lfarms mentioned and that really helped get more heat out. This too was a firebrick lined stove and I recall it was a heavy barrel. Never burned out that I was aware of. Seems to me the thin firebrick lining was standard procedure for barrel stoves.
 

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