MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,137
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
What exactly are you getting for 39 bucks?
What exactly are you getting for 39 bucks?
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.
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.
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.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.
link?