Camping tripod for cooking over fire by pearsonry
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This is a step by step guide to making a sturdy tripod you can use to hang a cook pot, dutch oven, coffee pot, or anything else you want to hold over a campfire.

There are very nice commercially produced tripods available, including expensive wrought-iron ones. This one can be made for $20-$25 if you buy everything brand new, and will be nearly as durable, and certainly lighter. It could be made cheaper, even free if you can scavenge the parts from scrap. (Update - I just saw a wrought-iron one at Joe's sporting goods for $45. I think I'll stick with my conduit one.)

Credit for this concept goes to Junior Doughty of www.deltablues.net. His tripod can be found at: http://www.deltablues.net/tripod.html
 
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Step 1: Materials and tools

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You will need:

3 sections of 1/2" conduit 4' long or longer
3 sturdy eye bolts
2 S-hooks
4' of chain - the kind with the wire links is great.

Tools:
Hammer
Tubing cutter or hacksaw
Pliers
Wire cutter
amolina5 says: Nov 22, 2011. 8:18 PM
This is a great idea and design! I've been wanting a dutch oven tripod for awhile now, I already have a tripod that I picked up for $15 with a grate and small chain, but when I put a dutch oven on, the weigh of it started to bend the plate on top that holds the legs together. With your instuctable I was able to have a two in one tripod set up that has collapsible legs. A grill grate, AND a dutch oven! You can pick up a pretty nice tripod at a farm and fleet either at the beginning, or the end of the year for cheap, that's when I found mine. Or just buy a round grill grate and put three small chains and a small s-hook together and hang it from yours.
glenm says: Nov 11, 2010. 10:44 AM
using two pair of pliers you can twist the half of the eyelet to the side. it can be twisted back in the same manner. wish i could explain this better. it's easier than prying it up and trying to close it again.
KMoffett says: Jul 25, 2010. 7:06 AM
I was looking for a suitable tripod design when I ran across yours. I was making a "crane" for our Geology team to take sediment samples form the bottom of a 100' deep glacial lake. They have to portage in the equipment to the lakes, so light and simple was a premium. 2' long legs, 2"x4" cedar frame bridging two kayaks, with pulleys and a winch. I added aluminum plugs in the ends of the conduit, to make it a little more rigid, but it's your concept. Thanks! Ken Tried to add a picture, but it doesn't show up. :(
S-KayakCrane 2.JPG
angeldmort says: Apr 28, 2010. 3:57 PM
Man... I feel so silly for over-thinking this. Thank you SO much for this. I think you just saved my party  this weekend, and improved my whole summer.
rhaubejoi says: Apr 20, 2010. 7:16 PM
brilliant idea!  Thanks for sharing!
Foaly7 says: Apr 20, 2010. 2:04 PM
Can you make the legs telescoping, since they're pipe i think you should be able to use another eyebolt to make them stay put.
shmuki says: Jan 25, 2010. 10:58 AM
Have you tested how much weight this thing holds? I'm curious because I camp wit large groups of people and the food weighs quite a bit
pearsonry (author) says: Jan 26, 2010. 5:53 AM
I haven't tested the tripod to failure, mainly because I don't want to have to make a new one.   I know it can hold my big dutch oven full of water, which can't be less than 30lbs.  If I had to guess, I'd say it could hold about 100lbs safely.  The closer the legs are to each other, the more it can withstand, but you trade that for stability.  The conduit does flex a little bit, but it is quite rigid and sturdy.  If the conduit turns out to be too weak, you can always use larger diameter tubing.  If I wanted one that could hold 500lbs, I'd use steel pipe and 1/4" chain.  I think you'd be hard-pressed to find a cookpot that this thing couldn't hold safely.
hg341 says: Feb 20, 2009. 9:23 PM
hey i like thisi dont like the sun...(or outdoors)but dutch oven work better if they are IN THE FIRE...
oakspoor says: Nov 12, 2009. 7:10 AM
Those Dutch are so hard to cook ;P
pearsonry (author) says: Feb 20, 2009. 9:42 PM
Yes, I agree, but a dutch oven is very versatile utensil. I use it in the fire, with coals on top and bottom, hanging over the fire for soups, in the electric oven, and you can even flip the lid over and make pancakes in it! Lewis and Clark claimed their dutch oven was the most valuable implement they had with them on their trek through the Louisiana Territory. This tripod can hold more than just the dutch oven as well. Coffee pot, hanging pot, boots, meat on a hook...
hg341 says: Feb 21, 2009. 9:23 PM
well in the fire is the only way i have used onei might have to make this someday
3leftturns says: Sep 18, 2009. 9:16 AM
This is SO cool. I'm gonna make me one... one improvement would be to add an eye bolt through the bottom foot of each leg, and string a chain through each hook, making a leg stabilizer for the whole unit.
pearsonry (author) says: Sep 22, 2009. 8:52 AM
I thought of doing something like that, but what I have found is that the ground is almost always so irregular that it would interfere with the chain and alter the geometry of the legs. If you are cooking on a very slick surface (frozen lake? solid rock?) then such an addition may help rather than hurt. Even though the legs are just hollow tubes, they seem to always dig in very firmly.
3leftturns says: Sep 22, 2009. 9:21 AM
Cool. I work for a company that sells survey tripods, and if a tripod is on a slick surface like concrete, it can kick out the legs. Not very good when you have $50k sitting on the top of the tripod. So a $10 loop of nylon webbing solves that problem. If you fed the chain through the eyebolts and not clamping them to the bolts, linked to itself in a loop, it would slide through the bolts to allow for changing geometry. I'll have to build one and let you know. This is so cool, thanks for the idea.
dlfynrdr says: Jul 17, 2009. 6:35 AM
This is a great idea! I made my own yesterday. Thanks for the idea. One suggestion I might make to anyone else making their own though has to do with the step involving separating the eye in the one bolt to link them all together. INstead of pulling the eye outwards like you show in the picture, separate it "sideways" like in the pic below. It's the same technique you use in separating links for jewelry making and chainmail. It's a bit easier and it makes sure the gap closes back properly.
FPESS2ZF2ZL53H0_MEDIUM.jpg
pearsonry (author) says: Jul 17, 2009. 12:21 PM
Yes, that would be the preferred technique. The eye bolts I used were too heavy for the pliers I had, so I couldn't twist them open.
defiant1 says: Mar 12, 2009. 9:23 AM
I actually have been using one just like this for a few years. An old man from Georgia showed me his one day so I built one of my own. I connected the top much differently though. I like your idea better with the eyebolts. It seems a little more flexible. Thanks for the tip. I think I'll modify ours.
jessyou says: Mar 1, 2009. 7:34 AM
FYI: Steel conduit is zinc-galvanized for corrosion protection. Underwriters Laboratories exposed rigid steel conduit and steel intermediate metal conduit and electrical metallic tubing to a 4 hour ASTM E119 fire test at a temperature of 2000°F. The conduit and EMT were still intact at the end of the test. This information is contained in a report Annular Space Protection of Openings Created by Penetrations of Tubular Steel Conduit – a Review of UL Special Services Investigation File NC546 Project 90NK111650, which is available from Allied Tube. Great INSTRUCTABLE!
pearsonry (author) says: Mar 3, 2009. 12:35 PM
Wow, thanks for the great info! This should put any safety concerns to rest. If anyone gets one of these over 2000F, let me know...
Joyusnoise says: Feb 21, 2009. 8:10 AM
The simplicity of the eye bolts is brilliant, I used old metal tent poles that pull apart at approx.. 24", The tent has long been .....well ..... retired :o) This makes it a little more portable, Haven't tested it yet, (Winter) The only concern is the green powder coat paint on the pole, I guess we'll find out in a few weeks :o), Thanks for a good idea
jennpearson says: Feb 20, 2009. 7:29 PM
This thing is awesome ~ we constructed it this afternoon, and plan on using it all summer. Thanks for the great idea!
pearsonry (author) says: Feb 20, 2009. 9:47 PM
I hope you have a great time, and get a lot of use out of it! Food always tastes better when you cook outside.
JerryMopar says: Feb 20, 2009. 7:00 PM
Heres one thing to know, The conduit is galvanized, which means zinc-coated. Hust hope your fire dosnt get to close to it, or youll get toxic zinc fume floating around. Othe rthan that, nice, simple, effective tripod ~~~ :)
pearsonry (author) says: Feb 20, 2009. 7:19 PM
Yes, true, but it is meant for cooking over a reasonable cooking fire. Hopefully I dont ever get this thing hot enough to vaporize zinc. If that happens, I'm sure I have bigger problems! Just the fact it is a big piece of steel with the lower parts cool to the touch should mean conduction will keep it from heating up to a dangerous point.
benthekahn says: Feb 20, 2009. 6:13 PM
Pretty cool, but for backpacking, the best thing is still just to cary some rope and make a tripod with sticks on location.
pearsonry (author) says: Feb 20, 2009. 7:08 PM
Yes, this is way too heavy to carry too far, and also too large to lug around for backpacking. If you want to shorten it, you can cut the legs in half and use conduit connectors to restore them to their full length. I left mine in one piece for simplicity. I intend to use mine in hunting camp and for car camping, so I won't be hauling it far.
atombomb1945 says: Feb 19, 2009. 3:20 PM
This looks good and stable. Are the eye bolts fixed to the polls in any way, or are they just setting inside the poll?
pearsonry (author) says: Feb 19, 2009. 6:01 PM
Once it is set up and in use, just the tension on the legs will keep the eye bolts securely in place. You can certainly use epoxy or watever you like to hold them in place though. I went back later and put some rubber washers around the eye bolts, and forced them into the ends of the legs, just to make the whole thing stay together better in transport, but this is not necessary.
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