This one is a winner. Takes a wok, a pot, and a DUTCH OVEN. Support us on Patreon: / littleaussierustics Available on www.littleaussierocketstoves.com AUSTRALIA ONLY for now.
I remember when people first started experimenting with double wall rocket stoves. They were filling the air-gap with sand, or Rock-wool, or Kaowool, or perlite, or vermiculite, or refractory... IIRC your clean air-gap is just as fast as the best of those... Good Job!
It's just the simple expedient of using the heat radiated from the rocket by channeling it! Sometimes, it takes a bloody genius to see the obvious, donut?
Good day Steve, thanks for sharing your family meal. That is a great design. Perfect for conserving and channeling the heat to your cooking surface. Wishing you and your family a blessed week filled with gentle seasonally appropriate weather and restful evenings together.
Boa noite. Gosto bastante do seu trabalho. Assisto tos os seus vídeos. Você é um excelente profissional . Ex excelente pai. Excelente marido. Parabéns !
Most impressive, I live in Africa, Uganda, for the most part, and I see this as a real alternative to what we have here, any chance these can be brought?
Hi Peter Yes these stoves are for sale on our website, we are currently only selling within Australia, but we do want to open things up to the overseas market again. We need to work through some things without insurance first. Our website is in the description of this video. Thanks mate.
You have some very harsh food critics sampling your cooking there Steve! Quickest way to ground a food critic is to get the opportunity to sample their dishes and then see how they enjoy hard scoring! 😂 The little one is growing up fast and apparently likes cheese! 😂 As per usual best wishes to you and your family! Mark from Melbourne Australia 🇦🇺
Great video! Appreciate the time and patience you put into designing this fantastic stove. Will you be getting anymore of the Wokkett Stoves in stock? Thank you!
My father has a "back when we were kids" story of a set-up my grandfather made, involving a small stove with a kettle (probably somewhere between one and two litres in today's money) that had an inverted cone instead of a base (i.e. it could only stand up when in place on the little stove). They would go on family picnics and the first thing they would do is grab a couple of handfuls of leaves, twigs sticks, light the stove, put the kettle on and then set-up the picnic, and make the tea with the water that had boiled by the time they set up. My father always said they were drinking tea while other people in the area where still fiddling with campfires. Apparently people always told him he should make and market them, but because he used scrap from his work, he always figured they had the rights to it if he did. Have never seen the stove (long gone, obviously) but one of my brothers did somehow get the kettle from amongst our cousins.
FYI I’ve bought 3 of your stoves now and this one by far is the most efficient and lowest maintenance when it comes to how much I can cook on it vs how much poking prodding and fuel used…
7:35 I just looked it up Australia only... Yeah, you're going to make a ton of money there. America is the largest economy in the world. You should be selling that stove here
No questions, but I remember seeing similar "collar" thing only for gas/electric stoves from "Mr. Teslonian" channel in RU-vid. I was like "why didn't I think of that" almost all the things I've seen and read about rocket stoves is that it should be insulated to retain the heat. I was also thinking about that volume of air inside it if there would be couple of holes into the fire so it would get preheated air, would it do any good? Perhaps in cold weather like below zero where everything freeezes.
@@LittleAussieRockets In terms of material choice is there a reason that you favour mild steel or so it seems? For heat conduction in woks stainless steel with a tapered thickness is ideal or non tapered with an aluminium or copper lamination similar to European, but for the stove itself especially a camp stove titanium I feel has perfect qualities in terms of extreme low weight and low thermal conductivity for quick packup, like Firebox. Would be great to see titanium options from your shop.