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[Cob] Heating cob homes?

Bill&Julie wkbjkb3 at mn.rr.com
Sun Jun 4 06:59:07 CDT 2006


Hello Dave,,,  Heat,,,!  Wow,,,  The thing that is good about
a fireplace of 100 years ago,,, is thant anyone with mosonary
skills could build one. The Bad thing, is that with the flue
open, and a good draw up the chiminey, the same amount
of air goes up the flue even with a small fire...

If your place of latitude NEEDS alot of heat, like here in
Minnesota? The rage is corn stoves,  Google it...
Less than $4 a day are the numbers that I am hearing for corn.
Bad things: I have not seen a continious stoker, so you have to
load the hopper every 1 to 2 days.
I have not seen a self ignighter, so it must stay burning.
And there is no thermostat control, so if you have extreem
swings on the outside temperature, you have to be there to
turn the nob up and down.
It must have electricity to run the feeder of the corn into the
fire box. But I have seen models that run on 12 volts.
I am thinking a large un interruptable power supply or
 I am ussing a large 12 volt RV battery and a 500 watt
inverter for if and when the power goes out...

We see $400 to $600 per month for natural gas heat...
So we are getting a corn furnace to connect to our gas furnace.
That way if we go away for the week end, the gas furnace
will keep things from freezing...

But like with anything else a bird in the hand is worth two in
the bush. Or: What you want to do will always work better
than what you don't want to do.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=corn+furnaces

Take a look,,bill  ~¿~



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "David T." <soap at whidbey.com>
To: "coblist" <coblist at deatech.com>
Sent: Saturday, June 03, 2006 8:57 PM
Subject: [Cob] Heating cob homes?


I was wondering if there are ways to heat COB homes that are not sean often.
How about waste oil from deep fat fryers? I know you can heat a kiln with
these. I was thinking how about something like what the romans used to do,
like the hypocosts, but have the flue run through one of the walls and then
curve back on itself multiple times to get the most efficiency from the heat
and let it leach into the cob wall and then slowly let it out over time.
I've seen this used also in clay stoves in Europe. I would think clay piping
would be the best thing to use in this case for the flue since it radiats
and holds heat very well.

I'm looking personaly for the best way to heat my home to the least ammount
of money. I will also have a wood fireplace in the home but something other
than wood when I get lazy and dont want to take the time for a wood fire
would be nice.

Sincerely;

David T.
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