Quote:
Originally Posted by tcreeley
What is keeping the two barrels together? Is it the welded pipe joining them? I heat with wood- a shenandoah. Sometimes I throw in a piece of wood pretty hard. The stove shifts around over time. I'm thinking that the wood pounding and high heat may over time weaken your welds. I'd be inclined to add a few vertical bracket braces so if the weld did let go, the stove would still stand as one piece.
Good luck!
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I welded the pipe that hooks them together to the bottom barrell. The hole is cut to fit the top. I shoved the top barrell on, then made plates that screwed the 2 barrells together on both ends.
This is the what it looks from the front with temporary doors installed. They need more 'substance' since the kinds 'flex' when fire is applied.
I'm going to weld some small angle iron to them to eliminate that.
The goal was to get the farm house off of the 38 degree mark. The stove they had was burned out.
I finished it at 1:00 sat. It was installed and fired by 3:00.