January 2013

Dear Friends

This is very useful.

Save it!

y = 4-08x2 - 0.0036x + 99.996

X = your altitude in meters.
Y = the local boiling point (at standard air pressure)

If you know your altitude, it will give you the ‘standard’ boiling temperature.
If you know the local boiling point, you can work backwards to get the altitude where you are standing.

Excel cell contents:

=99.996-0.0036*Altitude+4*10^-8*Altitude

where ‘Altitude’ is the cell in which the altitude is located.

Regards
Crispin
Nike

Jiko Bomba, load the lower half with pellets
Jiko Bomba Gasifying the Pellets and making char
Jiko Bomba, blue flame showing gasification
Jiko Bomba, lower chamber, where charred pellets can be used for low temperature Cooking

Here is some pictures of the Jiko Bomba casification cookstove.
The first shows the two part of the stove with pellet as fuel in the firebox before fire is lit.
Second show the stove burning.
The third the same, in the end of the gasification.
The forth shows the charcoal stage where the pellets remains as glowing carbon. A pot can be put on top of the bottom part of the stove, there are three supports for that.

Yours
Bjarne Laustsen
Air Jordan

Here is an example (hard to see of course because it is a still taken from a video) of the spinning of the flame caused by the shaped grate at the bottom.
The fire is circular because it is spinning rapidly, though pushed to the side by the way the fuel happened to be sitting. The spin adds turbulence without a fan and assists in keeping the flame away from the combustion chamber wall.
Here is a really cool picture of a Vesto burning walnut shells in TLUD mode.
Finally, here is a photo of a Vesto cutaway showing the inside parts in their correct positons.

Dear Marc and Ron and All interested in air flows

This is a response to questions about air and Marc’s tube.

Here is an old photo of secondary air entering the combustion chamber of a Vesto pushing the flame to the centre. This accomplishes the following:

Keeps the fire away from the wall, reducing the temperature it has to survive (a lot)
Keeps the flame going
Not allowing it to spread to one side away from the smoke on the other side that might otherwise ‘get away’.
Provides turbulent mixing of flame, hot secondary air and smoke
Allows for preheating to a significant degree (250-500 C)

The fire is circular because it is spinning rapidly, though pushed to the side by the way the fuel happened to be sitting. The spin adds turbulence without a fan and assists in keeping the flame away from the combustion chamber wall.

Here is a Vesto burning switchgrass pellets operating as TLUD, showing that there is nothing special about a TLUD in the sense of it having to operate in a particular fashion. The air flow through the fuel is reduced by the fuel and it operates as a TLUD. The secondary air is send across the surface to keep a deck of flame going at the height of the holes. This obviates the need for adding a circular disk at the top to ’keep the flame going’. Adding a ‘concentrator’ as Paul calls it takes more material and moves the fire too far away from the heat of the pyrolysis bed leading to unwanted flame-outs from time to time. A major issue with all pyrolysing TLUD’s. It is simply not necessary. Just keep the fire near the fuel. This also provides additional vertical space for the flame to finish burning before getting to a cold pot surface.

Finally, here is a photo of a Vesto cutaway showing the inside parts in their correct positons.

The primary air controller is the ring with holes in it. When the handle is moved to the side the holes are closed.Air Max

Hi!
(little correction: i am a Hungarian born Hungarian citizen, and now living in Hungary again... )

When seeing the design from Haiti we were a bit afraid of using springs for ejection, so we really wanted to push from the bottom.. And that was a challenge with the spikes that make the holes.. And then my colleague had the great idea with the two-way lid. (He is called Attila, I include him in the list) And I dont think it should make much difference that the holes are rectangular.

The other great idea of his, which i am not sure if u can clearly see from the pictures, is that one of the lids is actually a tray that should slide under the briquettes after compressed (and pressed above the mould), and when you lower the jack, the briquettes just stay on the tray and can be moved (we will probably make another one of these, to save time like with the two mould sets with the legacy press). When we were testing the press, we had a little accident with the jack, so I am not 100% sure yet whether the tray will leave the briquettes intact(ish) but the first try when the jack was working was promising.

The fabricators are of a small coop from another very poor region of the country. (They are actually also Roma/Gypsy). A friend NGO set us up with them, and they were really great to work with.

Sure we would be very happy to make a manual out of this, but I first want to wait until we can properly test it and hopefully make a second prototype soon. The material costs were quite high which would be quite good to reduce.

I attach a collection of images and some info on presses that can be used as inspiration. (I think it would be really interesting to experiment with the screw press with the weights).

Thanks for your support!
All the best,
Nora

Nora Feldmar
jordan Release Dates

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