DEVELOPMENT
REPORT - Double-Drum Sawdust Stove
By Gary Garriott
This is the VOA Special English Development
Report.
Sawdust is what remains after trees and logs
are cut up into boards for building houses and other structures. In
many parts of the world, sawdust is considered waste. It is thrown away
or left for the rain to wash away.
Sawdust is hard to burn, so it is not often
thought of as a fuel. Yet it is possible to burn sawdust to provide
heat or to cook food. One way is to build a stove from two large containers
or drums. To build one, place a one-hundred liter drum inside a two-hundred-liter
drum. The smaller drum is held in place by a false floor that connects
to the larger drum.
Three metal legs support the large drum. The
legs hold the structure above the ground. Beneath the false floor is
a space where the sawdust fuel is placed. There are holes in the false
floor allowing air to pass through.
As the sawdust burns, smoke passes from the
small drum that does not have a cover to the larger drum that is covered.
Pipes are placed in the wall of the outside drum to carry smoke outside.
The space for the fuel and the holes in the pipes can be changed if
more or less heat is desired.
To make the fuel, place the sawdust inside a
round, wooden container that is about one meter across. Leave a hole
in the middle. Make the sawdust hard by hitting it over and over again
with a stick or stone. Then remove the wooden container very carefully.
The sawdust keeps the same shape it had when
it was inside the wooden container. Place small pieces of paper into
the hole. When the paper is lighted with fire from a match, the sawdust
around it begins to burn. It is important that the sawdust be as dry
as possible. With dry sawdust, this stove can heat a small room for
six to eight hours.
During the first two hours of burning, there
is enough heat at the center of the cover on the larger drum to boil
water or to cook food. In addition to sawdust, other kinds of waste
from sawmills can be burned in the stove.
You can get more information about this kind
of stove from the group Volunteers in Technical Assistance. You can
contact VITA through the Internet at www.vita.org.
This VOA Special English Development Report
was written by Gary Garriott.
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