slowcowboy wrote:a oil fed fire is a LITTLE bit WAY to hot for a teardrop!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
and a LITTLE bit WAY to dangrous!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
oil fed fires are meant for heating large shops!!!!!!!!!!!!
they burn way hot.
and they are highly dangurous.
want a oil leak with flames inside a teardrop?
want flames shooting a mile in the air from the chimmey of the stove pipe coming out of your teardrop?
lets get reasnaoble here and think more on the lines of camping and heating a tiney space.
propane 12 volt is meant for camping and a lot more resasoble and plenty of heat!
I really don't think one needs to go over kill and get dangurous and haul a 55 gallon drum of oil around with them
just to camp!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
these oil feed wood fires.
are not kids toys!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
when you have one on a stove in your shop.
you don't work in the shop.
you work in front of the shop doors with them open and you are cozy out side in the huge amount of heat coming out of your shop.
and some times neigbors drive by and call the fire department on you!
slow
Mikka wrote:Have all a look at this webpage. Small wood or propane stove that would do in my opinion. primarely sold for Ice shanties and deer blinds but they look nice and do not cost an arm and a leg.
http://www.nuwaystove.com/index.php
slowcowboy wrote:especially burning used motor oil.
just saying.
slow
BlackCatRacing wrote:New to the forum, but an old hand at heating small spaces. I am an avid ice fisherman and have built a few ice shantys. Ironically my favorite size is 5x8 feet. I had an old wood stove. It was nice but was always maintaining it. The ash got everywhere and the wood was a dirty and bulky in the shanty. Went with the propane hunting stove and never looked back. Mine is vented (many are not) and it is a warm steady dry heat. I think this would be a great heater for a TD but it might have a problem if it is windy with back draft and the stove itself could burn someone or catch something on fire if it fell on it. The positive about the propane hunting stove is that a 20 pound LP container will last along time and there is no electricity involved. I also have a VW diesel Westfalia that I bought an Espar airtronic 2 diesel heater for. I LOVE it. It is very high tech and very safe. Forced exhaust so no back draft. Uses less than a gallon of fuel on high a day. Downside, expensive, needs battery power, and has a fan sound. What ever you use please be safe and make sure you will wake up in the morning. HAPPY winter camping.I hope to do some myself this winter.
Patrick
Ron Dickey wrote:
The last idea is having a fire outside have coils of coper wrapped around the top and a pump that would just pump water through the floor. Keeping the floor hot. I once lived in a house in NM that had a heated floor. The University pumped hot water from a plant and under 100 homes they stayed toastie winter long.
One could use a propane hot water heater.
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ron
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