Here are the Anila pictures now including the planned things.
No texts at all yet.
Looks ok as fade-slideshow animation.
I hope the Air current thing looks understandable enough.
The Gas Flames are not exaggerated... they are in proportions I have usually seen them in stove in general... so that people do not assume that they would have to do stuff to boost the flames into bigger than they need be.
What is not clear from here... is the point that in reality the last stage... where there is no more any ordinary burning biofuel... just the charcoaling by pyrolysis gasses burning in self maintaining reaction... lasts about as long as the other stages put together..
Black leaking stuff is Tar. It actually is helpful in this thing as it makes it (Nearly ? Completely ?) airtight, and kind of makes the leg pieces stick to rest of the frame when carried... it may take few stovefulls of charcoal making until enough tar appears to be noticed. It does leak down in tiny drops as shown... but seems really small amounts.
The grey stuff that is shown appearing leaking... is some pyrolysis gasses that may be seen occasionally outside the burning chamber, until tar has sealed the contraption. One of these gasses (the main one) is Carbon Monoxide that must be feared if it is leaking... thus the reminder.
MaxT
No texts at all yet.
Looks ok as fade-slideshow animation.
I hope the Air current thing looks understandable enough.
The Gas Flames are not exaggerated... they are in proportions I have usually seen them in stove in general... so that people do not assume that they would have to do stuff to boost the flames into bigger than they need be.
What is not clear from here... is the point that in reality the last stage... where there is no more any ordinary burning biofuel... just the charcoaling by pyrolysis gasses burning in self maintaining reaction... lasts about as long as the other stages put together..
Black leaking stuff is Tar. It actually is helpful in this thing as it makes it (Nearly ? Completely ?) airtight, and kind of makes the leg pieces stick to rest of the frame when carried... it may take few stovefulls of charcoal making until enough tar appears to be noticed. It does leak down in tiny drops as shown... but seems really small amounts.
The grey stuff that is shown appearing leaking... is some pyrolysis gasses that may be seen occasionally outside the burning chamber, until tar has sealed the contraption. One of these gasses (the main one) is Carbon Monoxide that must be feared if it is leaking... thus the reminder.
MaxT







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