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Huntindog1

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Wood Stove Design Challenge: A Low-Tech Way to Change the World

Solar and wind energy get more of the attention, but building a better wood-burning stove could have a major impact in lowering fossil-fuel emissions. So Popular Mechanics has teamed up with the Alliance for Green Heat and other organizations to back the Wood Stove Design Challenge, and you can enter.

By Dalene Rovenstine
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September 4, 2012 2:36 PM
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With cool weather on the way, a devoted group of innovators is working to find a better way to heat a home.

By the end of summer, inventors from around the world will enter their best heating designs in the Wood Stove Design Challenge, a competition led by the Alliance for Green Heat and several partners, including Popular Mechanics. The challenge seeks to find an innovative next-generation wood stove to heat the typical middle-class American home in an affordable, consumer- and environmentally friendly way. The winning design will be featured in the magazine—and earn a $25,000 prize.

Biomass heating—by wood-burning or pellet stoves—has spiked in popularity. According to the 2010 Census, the number of U.S. households heating with wood went up by 34 percent since 2000. That sounds great, and "green," but there’s a downside. "Wood smoke continues to be a problem, because many of the stoves that people are using aren’t very efficient, and that leads to extra emissions," challenge program manager Melissa Bollman says.

Solar, wind, and geothermal are in the forefront of energy technology now, but John Ackerly, president of the Alliance for Green Heat, says this competition will help wood stove technology gain more attention. "There is such an urgency to find ways to reduce fossil-fuel use," he says. "[Wood stoves] can be an incredibly affordable way to reduce fossil fuels at a tenth the cost of what solar thermal, geo, PV, or the other renewals can be."

Individuals, companies, and universities from around the world are encouraged to compete with designs to improve this technology. They must register by October 1. In-depth applications for each team are due by December 20 and are available now at forgreenheat.org. Although the deadline seems far away, a full-fledged design and all supporting materials must be ready for submission. Testing results and a prototype are encouraged but not required.

Most importantly for PM readers, Ackerly wants this to be a "people’s competition" and encourages backyard inventors to apply. Among the 10 teams already registered, some fit that description. "We have these guys who have been working in their basement for years," Ackerly says. "They claim to have this amazing new technology, and they are thrilled to put it up next to existing technology."

By January 2013, the team of judges—including Popular Mechanics editor-in-chief, Jim Meigs, Rod Tinnemore of the Washington Department of Ecology, and members of EPA and the New York State Energy Research & Development Authority (NYSERDA)—will select up to 16 finalists. Teams will have until November 2013 to perfect and create their designs for the ultimate showdown: the Wood Stove Decathlon.

During the decathlon held on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., judges will decide which units perform the best in real-world tests. In addition to the top prize of $25,000, an additional award of $10,000 will be split among two to five runners-up. But the money is only part of the equation. "If we can come up with a smokeless stove," Ackerly says, "we can come up with something that literally millions of Americans could adopt within a couple years."


Read more: Wood Stove Design Challenge: A Low-Tech Way to Change the World - Popular Mechanics
 
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GO PURDUE UNIVERSITY !!

Indiana boys all the way!!
 
Come on guys , please step forward , who has been working in their basements for years?
 
That s great my bid is on the people who made a wood stove if you will out of mud and hay heated the ingredients to harden cant remember what they called it but I think
it was called the rocket stove not sure. But the only thing that was coming out of the chimney was vapor! They form it to the hut/ house made a bench out of it and
it took very little wood at all just like what we would use as kindling I found it to be amazing maybe they signed up who knows. If anyone knows about this
could you please post it up I'll see if I can find it.
 
Hmmm, lets see, me in my garden shed or the engineering team from Travis or Woodstock.
 
I think long ago Richard Hill's stove was desinged to be the most efficient wood stove.
 
i know a few people who design stoves ==c not in the basement though, it the "shed" out back with all the technical gizmo's in it

Having seen that "shed" I think a great video could be made there.
 
That s great my bid is on the people who made a wood stove if you will out of mud and hay heated the ingredients to harden cant remember what they called it but I think
it was called the rocket stove not sure. But the only thing that was coming out of the chimney was vapor! They form it to the hut/ house made a bench out of it and
it took very little wood at all just like what we would use as kindling I found it to be amazing maybe they signed up who knows. If anyone knows about this
could you please post it up I'll see if I can find it.

Yeah I've seen people building those on youtube. They're called "rocket stove mass heaters".
 
i havent heard the term "rocket stove" but a mass heater is simply a large stone concrete or brick monolith with a firebox built into it, the intent is to burn a short violent hot fire to heat the mass up so that it would in turn bleed off heat over a long period of time. some call this a tulikivi, or a russian fireplace.
 
i havent heard the term "rocket stove" but a mass heater is simply a large stone concrete or brick monolith with a firebox built into it, the intent is to burn a short violent hot fire to heat the mass up so that it would in turn bleed off heat over a long period of time. some call this a tulikivi, or a russian fireplace.

Yeah, that's exactly what they're doing with the rocket stoves. They run the flue through a clay mass that's incorporated into the house such as a wall or bench. The heat soaks into the mass and then radiates the heat slowly. The fires are hotter and small with lots of air. One guy was claiming that with traditional wood heat, they were burning 4 cords a year and with a rocket stove they reduced it to 3/4 of a cord. There was some videos of it on youtube, but can you believe everything on youtube?.........lol
 
Those rocket stove guys need solution as to something that can be manufactured and mass produced and easy to install, I would think it would have to be a solution that would be marketable and able to sell it and make a profit. I think the person that comes up will the total package will win the competition.

Another question for the rocket stove idea is whats the burn time. Thats where blaze king would be an advantage.
 
Those rocket stove guys need solution as to something that can be manufactured and mass produced and easy to install, I would think it would have to be a solution that would be marketable and able to sell it and make a profit. I think the person that comes up will the total package will win the competition.

Another question for the rocket stove idea is whats the burn time. Thats where blaze king would be an advantage.

I agree with you on this. Seems all the ones I've seen are custom made per application.

I don't think they would get crazy burn times like the BK's. However most of these stoves are fed from the top down, so they were putting 4' to 6' branches in the feed tube and letting them gravity burn down. I thought that was interesting.
 
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