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For additional detail and information, join the Cooking Stoves Mailing List, browse the archives, read about current projects and ask other cooking stove builders, designers, and organizations disseminating improved stoves around the world.

Fish Smoker
Andrew Parker, UN Online Volunteering Service, Cameroon April 17, 2007

I am looking for some help in adapting Dr. Winiarski's wood-fired food dehydrator for fish smoking.

HEDON newsletter (16/04/2007)
Fran Humber, Household Energy Network HEDON

Laboratory Testing of Rocket Stoves of Various Capacities As Compared to the Three Stone Fire
Dean Still, Nordica MacCarty, Aprovecho Research Center, April 2007

In an effort to understand the relationship between stove capacity and fuel use and emissions the performance of three sizes of rocket stoves were compared.

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The stoves were tested with the 2003 UCB revised Water Boiling Test. Pots that were integral to the stoves were used without a lid. Kiln dried Douglas fir at approximately 10% moisture content was burned in all tests. Only one test was performed on the household stoves. Therefore, results are not statistically valid but should be useful for general comparison. The [attached] graphs show results from three Rocket type stoves as compared to a carefully tended Three Stone Fire.

PCIA Bulletin 11: Humanitarian Assistance, April 2007
Elisa Derby, Lutfiyah Ahmed, Partnership for Clean Indoor Air

Dear Partners,

We have published the 11th issue of the PCIA Bulletin!

HUAMANZAÑA, PERU: Phase II Assessment and Plan for Future Projects
Shannon M. Brink, EWB–PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, Princeton, NJ March 2007
Trip: 27 December 2006 –10 January 2007
www.princeton.edu/~ewb
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I am member of a student chapter of Engineers Without Borders. We have built two Inkawasi stoves with somewhat disappointing results. (We are still not achieving complete combustion, the sunken pot chambers are problematic for accommodating a variety of cooking utensils, and the smoke escapes from the gap around the pot skirts.) The engineers on the team are discouraged and have given up on the rocket elbow stove design. Though I'm not an engineer, I am skeptical that the stoves were built according to specifications (one was tiny, the other huge); outside engineers who have experience with similar stoves have suggested that our combustion chamber (which was short‹only a little more than 12") was too short.

As seen at ETHOS 2007, we have put together a step be step video on how to build Damon Ogle's design of an Institutional Barrel Stove. The stove is constructed from 200L barrels.

The stove was able to bring 45L of water to boil in 37 minutes using only 2150g of wood.

In a Controlled Cooking Test the Institutional Barrel Stove used 73% less fuel than an open fire!!

The video is available in multiple part downloads here on our website www.aprovecho.org

The video is also available on DVD for $10 + Shipping.

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