Rainier70 wrote:Interesting thread.
I think if I was doing this, I would go with one box off set from the wall a little. Then I would put a shield or partially open box around it. The shield would keep from getting burns, and would also provide an air path around your burner box for a computer fan to draw more heat off.
At the very least I would experiment with one box first and see how much heat your can get off of it. Easier to problem solve venting and sealing issues on one first.
mikeschn wrote:Did we ever decide what's the best way to handle stratification of heat in something tiny like a teardrop?
Mike...
mikeschn wrote:Did we ever decide what's the best way to handle stratification of heat in something tiny like a teardrop?
Mike...
mikeschn wrote:KC, Do you think those fin thingies would help with a candle heater?
Esteban wrote:Rainier70 wrote:Interesting thread.
I think if I was doing this, I would go with one box off set from the wall a little. Then I would put a shield or partially open box around it. The shield would keep from getting burns, and would also provide an air path around your burner box for a computer fan to draw more heat off.
At the very least I would experiment with one box first and see how much heat your can get off of it. Easier to problem solve venting and sealing issues on one first.
I'm skeptical whether one box would be sufficient. With one box it would have both a fresh air inlet and an exhaust outlet. My concern is that the heat would escape too easily. Inside baffles above the candles might help.
This is a thought experiment. Unlike Mike I am not doing a real test:
In my imagination I'm thinking a three box heater, with 3 vertical boxes, could work. The bottom one, to act as a combustion chamber, for the air inlet and the burning candles. A second (middle) box for heat radiation and to baffle the rising heat. At the top a third box for more heat radiation that has the exhaust to the outside. I wonder if internal baffles in each box might help? I think if the rising hot air has to follow a serpentine path through the boxes more heat might be radiated.
Googled "cookie tin" and found the Container Store has many to choose from. 8-1/8" x 6-3/16" x 2-15/16" cookie tin are rectangular tins that could create a compact cookie tin heater. Using three of them the heater might be about 8-1/8" wide and about 19" tall. I could have used many other sizes instead.
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