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Helping People Build What They Need 

OpenSourceLowTech
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Daniel Connell, a self-taught engineer, travels to Europe’s most chaotic refugee camp to help a strained community prepare for winter. Gathering trash from junk yards and local kitchens, Daniel teaches a group of refugees to build his “rocket mass heater” design using only waste materials and a can opener.
With a little ingenuity, this junk could be the difference between life and death for the camp inhabitants. Moria camp is situated on the Greek Island of Lesbos and currently stands at over 300 percent capacity. Riots, police brutality, and shamefully inadequate infrastructure make life for the refugees extremely challenging, a recent report warning the situation is “near breaking point”.
Previously Daniel has travelled the world helping communities from Indian slums to Guatemalan villages build vital infrastructure to ease the strains on those in need. At the Moria camp, he will confront his biggest challenge yet: racing to build as many heaters as possible to help keep the 8,000 men, women and children of the camp warm throughout the winter.
Help directly support us creating more prototypes and tutorials by joining the channel:
/ @opensourcelowtech
Filmmaker: Tristan Copley Smith
Executive Producer: Andrew Phillips
Editor: Mohannad Rachid
Thanks to Al Jazeera
www.aljazeera....
Project website for more tutorials and information:
opensourcelowt...
Facebook group for general discussion and contacts:
/ opensourcelowtech

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20 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 45   
@arkoprovo1996
@arkoprovo1996 2 года назад
Incredible work Daniel!!! Love your work!! Congratulations!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ♥♥♥
@OpenSourceLowTech
@OpenSourceLowTech 2 года назад
Thanks!
@andrewvanada52
@andrewvanada52 2 года назад
I really liked Daniel's comment about not being able to help people with the political or judicial problems but he can help them stay warm and cook food. 👍😃
@matthewsharp1178
@matthewsharp1178 2 года назад
I absolutely love the work you're doing, you've inspired me to learn a lot about this kind of stuff
@kueyang6232
@kueyang6232 2 года назад
Incredible, keep up the good work.
@jakattah
@jakattah 2 года назад
Nice job! I had some worries first up but your design is spot on!
@Maxim.Teleguz
@Maxim.Teleguz 2 года назад
Best way to get support in this community is to make more videos like thsi but show results for not just one tent but more tents being helped.
@yv6eda
@yv6eda 2 года назад
I love your work Daniel!
@nik4520
@nik4520 2 года назад
This is amazing and admirable
@jayofman
@jayofman 2 года назад
I wish guys like you could get the help to make intuitive interactive online learning resources. I see what you do and I just think independence, freedom🙏
@benimmortal5858
@benimmortal5858 2 года назад
bro you're like tony stark, amazing work God bless
@JonnnyStorm
@JonnnyStorm 2 года назад
thank you for spreading knowledge
@BarbellMethod
@BarbellMethod 2 года назад
THIS is why we are here. 🙏 Live. Learn. Love.
@tipo9nine514
@tipo9nine514 Год назад
Amazing brother.
@OpenSourceLowTech
@OpenSourceLowTech Год назад
Thanks ✌️
@jimcrelm9478
@jimcrelm9478 2 года назад
I made one of the smaller, tin can-based cooking stoves that featured on this channel. All I would say is, be very careful with the sizes and angles of pipes and chimneys - it was very difficult to get adequate air flow through the rocket stove, resulting in lots of smoke and very little heat compared to my own, theoretically much less efficient design/bodge. (A small tin can tied below a larger tin can with lots of holes in each - more like an incinerator than a stove.) But working with larger diameter tubes/barrels is probably easier than really tiny cans. And I reckon there's also a knack to getting a good fire going that I've not quite cracked yet. Getting a more intricate design to work would save a lot of fuel so it is worth persisting with.
@OpenSourceLowTech
@OpenSourceLowTech 2 года назад
What was the problem it was having? It will smoke for the first couple minutes until it gets up to temperature, but should be essentially smokeless after, and draw well. I found the main trick was to not over feed the burn tube, to only have two or three thumb thickness bits of wood at a time, with at least half the tube empty so it got enough air flow. Means having to feed it a little more often, but gives good results.
@jimcrelm9478
@jimcrelm9478 2 года назад
@@OpenSourceLowTech Could have been unsuitable fuel or as you say too fat of a fire. It was the two layer tin can design with the single layer entrance tube and the folded lid acting as a shelf for the fuel, with no added mass since it was designed for cooking. I could get a fire going (cheated and used hand sanitizer, it is a good improvised firelighter) but even after a few minutes, it just would not sustain more than a tiny flame without seeming to get starved of oxygen. I was adding loads of dry bamboo twigs, which burnt well in the incinerator, but they needed constant pushing further in to the rocket stove because the fire was so small and they burnt so quickly, the unburnt ends cluttering the entrance otherwise. I had more success poking them down the chimney but still had issues with draw and smoke. Might try hawthorn or another slower burning wood next time, if I can get it to combust at all. But I also think I got the construction wrong. Hope it's clear I am not blaming you! I reckon I must have just used the video and not read any detailed written instructions so could even have built it wrong. If you were able to help the people at Moria then that is amazing. It certainly is a chaotic world we live in and it is about to get much worse worldwide due to events in Eastern Europe and in India.
@OpenSourceLowTech
@OpenSourceLowTech 2 года назад
My email's on the opensourcelowtech.org site, if you want to send me some photos I can have a look at what the issue might be.
@Maxim.Teleguz
@Maxim.Teleguz 2 года назад
@@jimcrelm9478 you should look at how a carburetor works and try to make that work using a butterfly valve in the pipe somewhere to control. Easy to build a small butterfly valve in a pipe for stopping airflow volume. Doesn’t need to be perfectly sealed.
@Bitcoinbeacon77
@Bitcoinbeacon77 2 года назад
Good to see you friend.
@magnoid
@magnoid 2 года назад
Nice to see you're getting some main stream publicity! Onward!
@wherami
@wherami 2 года назад
Excellent use of waste. Our steampunk world as societies collapse
@portroyal6886
@portroyal6886 Год назад
Omg I should of guessed you were from new Zealand, I love your videos well done ....
@dirk9568
@dirk9568 2 года назад
Need more of these humans
@mrMacGoover
@mrMacGoover Год назад
QUESTION: I have a ingenuitive mind like yourself and have studied various things on the internet as you have as well. Things I've studied are: methane production, atmospheric water harvesting (fog), permiculture, biomass alternative fuels ect.. and was wondering how you obtain funding for your trips? Do you work with N.G.O.'s , do you get sponsorship from an organization?
@OpenSourceLowTech
@OpenSourceLowTech Год назад
Occasionally either, usually neither and just self fund.
@teslafudge1585
@teslafudge1585 2 года назад
You are an inspiration.
@makerbeelab5546
@makerbeelab5546 2 года назад
We should design some stove stirling generator! Keep people warm + charge their phones!
@makerbeelab5546
@makerbeelab5546 2 года назад
@@capturedflame Charging more phones :)
@OpenSourceLowTech
@OpenSourceLowTech 2 года назад
I've been thinking on options for that kind of thing a while now. Stirlings can be very effective, but probably a bit of a build process in order to produce even 5-10W of electricity. As Daniel mentions thermopiles and the like are also an option, and this stove should get hot enough to get them to function at least, but they're very low efficiency and can also be a bit tricky to source and make use of. But it would be great to get power off these as well, so I will keep looking for a nicely workable option.
@lowrads3653
@lowrads3653 2 года назад
@@OpenSourceLowTech Stirling engines are very finicky beasts that have to be carefully balanced just to operate at a fixed rate. Other heat engines have similar problems, which is why it took the better part of a century to tame them with governors and most of the early field of thermodynamic analysis just to get them to be responsive to loads and not rupture so often. Thermal power systems for thermal applications, electrical power systems for electrical applications. No need to reinvent the wheel with conversion hardware.
@ottodidakt3069
@ottodidakt3069 2 года назад
Rock on brother !!!
@Kiyarose3999
@Kiyarose3999 2 года назад
Have you done any BioGas projects?, cos they can be made simply out of scrap and fed waste kitchen etc scraps.
@OpenSourceLowTech
@OpenSourceLowTech 2 года назад
It's definitely on the list of things to take a crack at at some point. I do have in mind a variation on my solar hot water panel as a temperature regulator for biodigestors in cold environments...
@scdon123
@scdon123 2 года назад
Do you have a tutorial for making this design?
@OpenSourceLowTech
@OpenSourceLowTech 2 года назад
The core of it is more or less the same as the rocket cooker: studio.ru-vid.comywljr9RKExQ/ and then just bury that in sand in a container of about that size with a 20 litre oil can over the riser and a little tin can chimney coming off that. If you need a sketch email me and I can provide more detail.
@scdon123
@scdon123 2 года назад
@@OpenSourceLowTech Thanks, I've dropped you an email.
@NightmareFuelsYou
@NightmareFuelsYou 2 года назад
More comments more views keep it up
@childrenoftolkien
@childrenoftolkien 2 года назад
Isn't al Jazeera state owned?
@jimcrelm9478
@jimcrelm9478 2 года назад
Yes, by Qatar. Every news organisation has an agenda of some sort, state owned or not. What matters if you ask me is having access to a wide range of different sources and different points of view - the truth filters through a lot more easily that way. But yes, definitely worth knowing who funds what.
@OpenSourceLowTech
@OpenSourceLowTech 2 года назад
The footage was shot by a documentarian friend of mine and was originally going to be sent to The Guardian, but that fell through and Al Jazeera picked it up instead for their AJ Shorts channel, which got a really good response.
@mike60521x
@mike60521x 2 года назад
@@jimcrelm9478 Why are'nt Qatar and Saudi Arabia taking in any refugees
@jimcrelm9478
@jimcrelm9478 2 года назад
@@mike60521x They should and it is hypocritical that they don't, especially when countries like Jordan and Turkey have taken millions. As wealthy countries they should be going out of their way to help resettle refugees. But on the contrary, Saudi is conducting its war in Yemen with an appalling callousness toward innocent lives on its own doorstep, so I wouldn't expect it to come to the aid of anyone in need. (I don't see the connection to Saudi, by the way, but I'll never pass up an opportunity to criticise it.) It's up there with the famine in Afghanistan (due to sanctions) as one of the worst humanitarian crimes of our age and a stain on the nation states which allow it to happen.
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