Wow that is impressive! There is a guy in my area that built one but is using forced air into the hopper.
Very cool!!
Wow that is impressive! There is a guy in my area that built one but is using forced air into the hopper.
Very cool!!
I’ll get back to you with a walk-around as soon I get the time.
Or a quick photo of a hand drawn sketch 
Ok Don! You win. Sketch first. Video later.
Have to go to sleep now. Midnight here. Tons of work at work this week.
A simplified sketch of major flows:
I promised a boiler video. Here it is.
I expected 5 min when turning the camera off. It turned out 17 min. Don´t know how that happened. Time flyes when you´re having fun 
Thanks Jan for the video. If a picture is worth a thousand words, your video is worth a million words!
Hello JO,
A great presentation. The turbolator strips causing turbulence and enabling the heat exchanger to gather more heat was new to me and a very interesting event to keep in mind for future gasification adventures. The combustion tube shots were neat. Thanks for taking the time and posting this informative video of what I would call a bottom lit, downdraft wood furnace.
Pepe
Thanks JO ,
Enjoyed the video very much 
Exactly what I was looking for, I want to build one like this for my shop, thanks for posting! 
That fire sure looks like it would make the house cozy. I heat by natural gas but we keep the thermostat low and at night while sitting around use the fireplace to raise the temperature a little. I know that my fireplace is probably the mouse inefficient use of wood. Insurance companies frown on wood furnaces.
What is happening over there this winter. I have never heard you say, but do you have a day job? I know you spend some time prepping wood for the winter. Are you able to work on you gasifier this winter.? TomC ( I will try to down load a picture and tell you a story about MY wood prepping this year.)
Tom,
living in latitudes simular to Alaska and Siberia, winters are obviously dark. This winter was strange however, no snow and hardly freezing until christmas and then suddenly snow and around -30 C (-20 F) ever since. Today a couple inches of snow and a heat wave, -5 C (23 F).
I’ve worked full time for almost 30 years in a paper mill 10 miles from here. I work 3-shifts.( I tried another job for a couple of years in the middle, but that’s another story).
Yesterday morning I got home from working nights and I now have 4 days off. Working 7 in a row and 4 off all year around, 11 days vacation in the summer.
Days off, meaning work at home, of course. Same thing for most of us, I guess.
Apart from collecting a few bits and pieces of junk there has been no development on the gasifier since november.
But I promise that as soon as…
…temp is above freezing
…there is no rain or storm
…I’m not at work
…I don’t have to babysit granddaughter
…wife has no list (or she can’t see me)
…there are no visitors demanding coffee chatting
…no marragies or funerals…
…I’ll get the welder outside and plug it in.
I’m looking forward to your wood prepping story and pics.
Nice informative video,i have a better view of the making in the gasifier type wood boiler heating designs,THANKS
Jan-Ola
What happens if, at 90 C, the circulation pump was not working? (Eg in case of power failure)
Thierry
Hello Thierry,
Primary air inlet will close by gravity and the fire will cool down in a few minutes. A little heat driven circulation still going on, just enough to keep the boiler from boiling.
I’ve had a few power outs over the years and it works.
https://woodboilers.com/media/wysiwyg/Downloads/Product_Brochures/Solo_Plus_Brochure.pdf
I believe this is similar to what is being described.
Regards,
Garry Tait, Manitoba
Hello Garry,
Yes, very simular. There are several commercial brands out there.
A word of advice though, if a may. Actually two:
Hi Garry,
Thanks for posting the wood gasification boiler video. I picked up a couple more ideas for preheat. One I can semi try is pulling my inlet air through a shroud around my cooling tubes and in turn feeding that heated air into my present cyclone preheat arrangement.
My shroud would only surround the first 3 and hottest tubes. I’m sure I can reduce the size of my cooler as I can now hold my hand on the last 2 tubes as they are just warm during full operation. I know now that my firetube could be shorter, wasn’t sure about this when I started. Now to draw a preliminary design of a more compact unit. Fun! The single port air inlet (SPAI) feeds a circular manifold with 5 feeds to the nozzles.
Pepe
Hey pepe, post some drawings and we could make some suggestion
Very good work Richard. I’m piecing together a system myself, downdraft gasification, but aiming for continuous charcoal production and collection. Unfortunately the heating season is largely over, and it’s still in the shop. Like farming, there’s always next year… 
Jo: yes, I agree, a natural draft system is safer, and a sounder design, but otherwise essentially the same as what they illustrate. If pressurized air is introduced in the combustion chamber, that would be safer, and should eliminate smoke for start up, inducing a slight vacuum in the fire box.
Regards,
Garry Tait, Manitoba