Oh, and Please vote for me in the Keep Warm contest!
Also, as of 2013, I'm considering making a few of these and selling them in the UK if anyone would be interested? They will all be finished in ultra high temperature black paint like the one in the second image.
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Signing UpStep 1: Materials
-Gas Bottle (Large (47kg) or medium, but not the really small ones. The main image is a medium one.)
-A ~6 Inch Diameter Pipe 90 Degree Bend (I Used Lorry Exhaust)
-A length of ~6 Inch Diameter Pipe For Chimney (I Used Lorry Exhaust)
-Something For Handle, (I used two bolts welded together and a scrap piece of metal for latch)
-A Section Of Heavy Duty Hinge, Average Door Hinge Wont Be Strong Enough
-Box Section For Air Vent (~3 inch square for medium bottles, double for large bottles)
-Length Of Rod For Air Regulator (Optional, for damping fire down)
Tools:
-Grinder
-Welder
-Hose Pipe











































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I find with a small stove that a 6" flue is too big and have used as small as 3" with a 1 ft cube stove. Nothing says the flue has to be round, either. If you can cut and weld sheet metal or even plate then just fold it square or butt-weld.
In the UK you can still get Zebo which you put on the stove cold with a brush and it looks like graphite and gets darker with use - this is the modern equivalent of black-leading. It lasts for years and makes the stove look good.
Cheers.
Gordon
On a side note once you have filled the tank with water the propane is gone, the quantity of propane adsorbing into the steel tank wall will be miniscule. What you can smell is not propane (propane is odourles) but the ethanethiol used to make the gas smell so you can detect a leak, Ethanethiol will bind to the steel walls very well and can be smelt at concentrations below 1 part per billion in air.
Any advice on the thickness of the flat plate?
Thanks,
Loki.