Home Ownership (misc.consumers.house)

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Bret Ludwig
 
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Default Home Heating Options for Rural Midwest Residents?

http://www.motherearthshopping.com/M...temNumber=1835

This build-it-yourself, outdoor furnace keeps the dirt, soot, smoke and firewood outside, where it belongs. Includes materials list and 29 pages of building instructions and diagrams.



Build an external liquid boiling "furnace hut", and subscribe to every
free trade magazine and religious or political fund raising mail scam
in existence. Burn what the mailman delivers and it will heat you even
in Minnesota.

I always knew junk mail was good for something!

You could also burn cardboard, household garbage, even ****ty
disposable diapers in such an apparatus if the heat was hot enough.

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Steve Spence
 
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Bret Ludwig wrote:
http://www.motherearthshopping.com/M...temNumber=1835


This build-it-yourself, outdoor furnace keeps the dirt, soot, smoke and firewood outside, where it belongs. Includes materials list and 29 pages of building instructions and diagrams.




Build an external liquid boiling "furnace hut", and subscribe to every
free trade magazine and religious or political fund raising mail scam
in existence. Burn what the mailman delivers and it will heat you even
in Minnesota.

I always knew junk mail was good for something!

You could also burn cardboard, household garbage, even ****ty
disposable diapers in such an apparatus if the heat was hot enough.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/homemadehahsawoodheaters/ is a discussion
group specific to the hahsa water heater.


--
Steve Spence
Dir., Green Trust, http://www.green-trust.org
Contributing Editor, http://www.off-grid.net
http://www.rebelwolf.com/essn.html
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after working in power plants..then being a pressure vessel inspector for a
couple decades...i sure hope everyone understands the danger
presented by hot water under pressure.
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Linda E. Hungerford
 
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In article . com,
"Bret Ludwig" wrote:

You could also burn cardboard, household garbage, even ****ty
disposable diapers in such an apparatus if the heat was hot enough.


An ex-tenant left garbage containing disposable diapers. They did not
burn easily, even on a rack above/in a very hot fire.

Linda H.


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Larry Caldwell
 
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Linda E. Hungerford wrote:

An ex-tenant left garbage containing disposable diapers. They did not
burn easily, even on a rack above/in a very hot fire.


Disposable diapers are intended to sequester carbon in landfills, where
they will persist for centuries without breaking down. Disposable
diapers are the biggest single force opposing global warming. As the
most effective carbon bank in the world, they may save the planet.

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nospamplease
 
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Larry Caldwell wrote:
Linda E. Hungerford wrote:


An ex-tenant left garbage containing disposable diapers. They did not
burn easily, even on a rack above/in a very hot fire.



Disposable diapers are intended to sequester carbon in landfills, where
they will persist for centuries without breaking down. Disposable
diapers are the biggest single force opposing global warming. As the
most effective carbon bank in the world, they may save the planet.

I feel all warm and fuzzy knowing that dirty
diapers will save the planet. Do we get a
super-hero with some feces on his chest to go with
that?
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Linda E. Hungerford
 
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In article .com,
"Larry Caldwell" wrote:

Linda E. Hungerford wrote:

An ex-tenant left garbage containing disposable diapers. They did not
burn easily, even on a rack above/in a very hot fire.


Disposable diapers are intended to sequester carbon in landfills, where
they will persist for centuries without breaking down. Disposable
diapers are the biggest single force opposing global warming. As the
most effective carbon bank in the world, they may save the planet.


Huh??

Linda H.
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Duane Bozarth
 
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Stormin Mormon wrote:

No, the oil congeals. Turns solid. Has to be drained and handled while hot.


Not most cooking oils...they're specifically designed to be liquid at
room temperature--otherwise, they'd be a pita to handle when new, not
just when used.


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Chris Torek
 
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Stormin Mormon wrote:
No, the oil congeals. Turns solid. Has to be drained and handled while hot.


In article ,
Duane Bozarth wrote:
Not most cooking oils...they're specifically designed to be liquid at
room temperature--otherwise, they'd be a pita to handle when new, not
just when used.


Comeback #1: "No, no, you're supposed to put the bottle of oil in
the microwave before attempting to pour it into the fryer!"

Comeback #2: "But I thought everyone kept their rooms at -10 degrees
Fahrenheit!" (This assumes you fry in canola oil, which solidifies
around -18 to -20 degrees C. Peanut oil solidifies around 3 C or
38F, and thus may well solidify in an average refrigerator. See
the last table at http://journeytoforever.org/biodiesel_yield.html.)
--
In-Real-Life: Chris Torek, Wind River Systems
Salt Lake City, UT, USA (40°39.22'N, 111°50.29'W) +1 801 277 2603
email: forget about it http://web.torek.net/torek/index.html
Reading email is like searching for food in the garbage, thanks to spammers.
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