Happy Thanksgiving to all my T-man buddies ! Unfortunately, work requires me to stick around on this holiday so I shipped the family off and will be working on the following project for the duration. I've had several promises for a plate of turkey, gravy and stuffing to be dropped off as well.
When we bought our home a couple years ago, the seperate garage had this pot-bellied stove in it.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/11/full-13198-25365-barrel8.jpg)
I spend a lot of time working on projects out there and have tolerated the stove's in-efficiency for the past 2 years. It doesn't hold much wood and burns hot and fast even with the damper and vents closed. I'd love to put a nice blaze king out there but it's not in the budget so I'm gonna try a barrel stove with some added measures to keep the air-flow in check and regulated.
I've got a bandsaw mill and have LOTS of scrap off-cuts and flitches to keep it well fed all winter long.
Thought I'd post some pictures of the process of putting one of these together, with some changes.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/11/full-13198-25368-barrel13.jpg)
I'm not gonna use the feet included in this kit as I want the stove higher off the ground. I'll weld up a rack to hold the stove about 3 feet off the shop floor. . .
Got a barrel with removable lid which will help with the cleanout. This will also help in loading the stove with the occasional big wood that won't fit through the small door included in the kit; the door will be adequate for most of my sawmill waste.
I cut out the door and chimney pipe with a cutting torch, then built a fire with some of that snow-covered wood; propane torch helped get it going. Once it got burning, the paint burned off in about 20 minutes.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/11/full-13198-25372-barrel5.jpg)
I removed the ashes and with temps in the high 30's it cooled down in no time, allowing me to keep working on it. I put a wire wheel on my grinder and touched up a few areas but for the most part, the fire did its job and there was very little paint left on the barrel. After the wire wheel, I wiped it down with some paint thinner. I warmed the barrel back up with the propane torch, in preparation for a coat of primer.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/11/full-13198-25373-barrel6.jpg)
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/11/full-13198-25374-barrel4.jpg)
Anybody who has done any research on this "high-heat" primer and paint, has probably read the reviews of dissatisfied customers saying the paint pealed off or didn't hold its color and eventually turned black. This is a problem if you don't wanna use the high-heat black color. (I wanted to paint it red... what can I say, I'm a glutten for punishment.) Needless to say, I made a purchase with some skeptisism.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/11/full-13198-25375-barrel1.jpg)
There are specific "baking" and cooling instructions when using this paint and they claim the color will hold if you follow them. I've got a plan on how I'm gonna do it and I guess we'll see ... stay tuned.
One of the little additions I'm gonna use is a "tray" to line the bottom of the barrel. I've cut a piece from another barrel which fits nicely.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/11/full-13198-25376-barrel11.jpg)
This will make cleaning out the ashes much easier as I can just pull out the tray and dump it. It'll also add another layer to the stove bottom which should slow the burn-out as I don't wanna fill it with sand, or fire brick.
Primed and ready for heat-treating.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/11/full-13198-25379-barrel20.jpg)