Ron,
That is far too restrictive. It means that a stove is what the GACC
procedures define to be a stove. Not good.
Pig on a stick is a stove.
Paul
Paul S. Anderson, PhD aka "Dr TLUD"
Email: [email protected] Skype: paultlud Phone: +1-309-452-7072
Website: www.drtlud.com
On 5/6/2013 10:12 AM, [email protected] wrote:
Lanny
How about this one:
/"A stove is an apparatus to which one can meaningfully apply the GACC
WBT 4.2.2 procedures." /(Meaningfully meaning one can get out of group
1 results.)/
/
Yesterday was Cinco de Mayo - and Denver has the US largest
celebration. I bought a wonderful ear of corn ($3.00), that took 20
minutes to "roastl" (husk-on) in a gas-powered chain driven
"oven-roaster" (but not a stove), with the corn travelng about 20
feet, with maybe 15 feet undergoing roastng. I can't see a way to
apply any WBT to this device. I can barely see it for most of the
other "apparati" being proposed
Ron
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From: *"Lanny Henson" <[email protected]>
*To: *"Discussion of biomass cooking stoves"
<[email protected]>
*Sent: *Monday, May 6, 2013 7:24:39 AM
*Subject: *Re: [Stoves] Stove Definition
I apologize for the "is a pig on a stick over a fire a stove?" question.
I hope I did not cause the waist of too many man hours on such a silly
question.
To settle this issue so we can move on to more serious topics, I think I
finally have a definition for a stove that we can all agree on: When I
saw
Crispin's photo of the skewers on a grill it came to me!
Stove: an apparatus that puts the heat, on the meat, so to speak. smile
Lanny
----- Original Message -----
From: <[email protected]>
To: "Discussion of biomass cooking stoves"
<[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, May 06, 2013 8:08 AM
Subject: Re: [Stoves] Stove Definition
> [Default] On Thu, 02 May 2013 19:49:13 -0500,Paul Anderson
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Note: The 3-stone fire is a stove because of the 3 stones onto
which a
>>pot can be placed. Take away the stones and you only have a fire
and do
>>not have any stove structure, so a simple fire is not a stove.
>
> But does it become one when a pot is suspended over it?
>
> To my mind a stove needs some way to control air, either by
> controlling the draught or by restricting air. A 3 stone fire might do
> this but an open fire cannot.
>
> AJH
>
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