I’m putting together a tent sauna, but my current settup won’t go above 125F. It’s a Morzh tent, and I’m trying to reuse my US stove caribou 18 stove, but even though with the rocks the steam is nice, its heat is inadequate. It’s honestly inadequate for my 9x13ft canvas tent in the winter also, so I was wondering if any of you have ever used a larger hot tent stove in a sauna (like a winnerwell nomad stove). It looks like I might need to get two purposes built stoves, one for long steady burns in the tent, and another for fast intense burns in the sauna. Though obviously if I can avoid the added expense of a second stove it would be nice. Else, maybe some tips for getting a hotter fire? I’m just burning fir I cut last spring.
Overall pic to show size and chimney height
Whats a sauna
>>2971391I don't know shit, so take it all with a bucket of salt.Heat in heat out. Too low temp means that either you are not supplying enough heat, or that too much heat is escaping. No idea what that tent you are using is or how insulated it is, or much about saunas in general, but afaik they are heavily insulated too keep heat inside.Dunno much about wood, but I heard that best wood to burn is hard broadleaf seasoned for 3+years to make sure its bone dry.In order to get hotter burn, consider trying charcoal once or twice, it may be enough to offset possible insulation problems and get your tent hot enough. It burns hot enough for smithing tho, so it should be fine. Maybe add a fan forcing air inside for even hotter burn or something, dunno.
>>2971578National sport of finland.
>be me>finna fix a busted thermobonker in my electric stove>pop the top>old limiter looks like it fought God and lost>reach in to unhook it>something else in there>small glass vial>half full of black caked whatever the fuck>attached to a metal cable >as soon as I tug on it rub the soot off>range turns on by itself