Rocket Stove Mk II / TLUD — Stainless Square-Tube Core + Pot Skirt + Chimney (GamerzCrave)
SHTF-COOK TLUD STAINLESS

Rocket Stove Mk II / TLUD — Stainless Square-Tube Core + Pot Skirt + Chimney

Packs into itself, cooks on twigs, and burns clean when run right. Top-lit updraft gasifier core (TLUD) inside a rugged, field-serviceable shell.

What You’re Building

  • Core: 4″×4″ (102×102 mm) stainless square-tube TLUD canister with primary-air grate and a preheated secondary-air ring for clean flame.
  • Pot Skirt: stainless ring with a controlled 11–15 mm gap around the pot for high efficiency.
  • Chimney: 1 m detachable 4″ round stainless flue + spark arrestor screen.
  • Packable: chimney nests; skirt clamps flat; spare fuel can fits over core.
TLUD = top-lit; air from below; pyrolysis zone moves down; hot secondary air burns wood-gas at the top for low smoke.

Specs (target)

FuelTwigs/pellets, dry biomass (≤3 cm dia)
Power~1–3 kW (load & fuel dependent)
Core304 SS, 1.6–2.0 mm wall (16–14 ga)
Skirt gap11–15 mm (12 mm default)
ChimneyØ 100 mm × 1 m, SS, spark screen
Weight~6–8 kg assembled

Bill of Materials (Parts to Buy)

Metals & Core

Square tube (core)304 SS, 4″×4″ (102×102 mm), length 330 mm, wall 1.6–2.0 mm
Square sleeve (air jacket)304 SS, 5″×5″ (127×127 mm), length 160 mm (top section), wall 1.0–1.6 mm
Perforated grate304 SS plate 2–3 mm, perforated Ø6–8 mm holes, 35–40% open
Top plate304 SS sheet 1.6 mm, with pot-support tabs (3–4 pcs)
Pot skirt304 SS sheet 0.8–1.0 mm, forms ring (height 120 mm) + 3–4 standoffs (12 mm)
ChimneyØ100 mm SS flue, 2× 500 mm nesting sections + clamp
Spark arrestorSS woven mesh 304, 1/2″ (≈12 mm) to 3/8″ (≈9.5 mm) grid, cap ring & hose clamp
Insulation (opt.)Bio-soluble ceramic fiber blanket, 10 mm, for around upper core jacket

Hardware & Misc

FastenersM5/M6 SS bolts, nylock nuts, fender washers; SS pop rivets 3.2 mm
Air sliderSmall SS angle + 1.0 mm sheet for primary air shutter (with slots)
Legs/base3× SS angles or tripod base plate (folding)
Handles2× spring SS handles (stay cool)
FinishEdge trim, high-temp anti-seize (bolts), labels
ToolsCutoff saw w/ SS blade, drill + step bit, deburring tool, riveter, clamps, files, respirator, gloves

Avoid galvanized steel in the hot gas path (zinc fume hazard). Use stainless in flame areas.

Cut List

ItemQtySize (mm)Notes
Core tube (4″×4″)1102×102×330Deburr; this is the fuel canister
Grate plate196×96Perforate Ø6–8; sits 20 mm above bottom
Primary air ring1102×102×20 (strip)Forms intake frame for slider
Secondary jacket (5″×5″)1127×127×160Slides over top; heats secondary air
Top plate1130×130Center cut-out 105×105; tabs for pot rests
Pot-skirt sheet1360×120Roll to ring Ø ~ 300 mm (adjust to pot)
Skirt standoffs412×20×1 (L-tabs)Sets 12 mm gap
Chimney sections2Ø100×500Nesting; top gets spark screen cap
Legs/feet325×25×250 (angle)Foldable or removable

Printable Diagram

Print at 100% (A4/Letter). Dimensions in mm.

Front View — TLUD Core + Secondary Jacket + Pot Supports 4″ sq core Perforated grate ~20 mm up 5″ sq jacket (secondary air preheat) Ø3–4 mm jets 3 sides @ top Pot supports (3–4 tabs) Primary air slider (slots) 330 Side View — Pot + Skirt + Chimney Pot (typ. Ø 260) Skirt height ~120 11–15 mm gap Ø100 chimney + spark screen
Secondary air jacket covers only the upper ~160 mm of the core. Drill 3–4 rows of small jets near the top inside edge to inject preheated air.

Assembly — Step by Step

  1. Prep & Deburr. Cut the 4″ square tube to 330 mm. Deburr all edges. Mark a line 20 mm up from the bottom inside wall for the grate ledge.
  2. Grate. Cut a 96×96 mm SS square from 2–3 mm plate. Drill Ø6–8 mm pattern to ~35–40% open area. Rivet or tack small tabs so it sits on the 20 mm ledge.
  3. Primary air slider. Make a window (≈90×20 mm) centered on one face, 10 mm above the grate line. Fabricate a slotted slider plate with a small handle; mount with two M4 screws & slots so you can meter air.
  4. Secondary air jacket. Slide a 5″ square sleeve (127×127×160 mm) over the top of the core, leaving a 10–12 mm annular gap around three sides. Seal the top of the gap with a small ring/plate; leave the bottom open so cool air is drawn up, heated, then injected near the top.
  5. Secondary jets. Drill Ø3–4 mm holes on three inner faces of the core, ~15 mm below the rim, every 10–15 mm. These jets admit preheated secondary air to burn wood-gas cleanly.
  6. Top plate & pot tabs. Cut a 130×130 mm plate with a 105×105 mm square opening. Add 3–4 pot-support tabs (10–12 mm tall) at 90° spacing. Bolt to the jacket so it’s serviceable.
  7. Legs / base. Bolt three SS angle legs or a skid plate under the core; target 20–30 mm clearance below for fresh primary air intake.
  8. Pot skirt. Roll 0.8–1.0 mm sheet to a ring that gives 11–15 mm gap around your pot (12 mm default). Rivet 3–4 standoffs inside the ring to set gap. Add three hooks or a band clamp so it sits concentric over the pot on the tabs.
  9. Chimney & screen. Fit two 500 mm sections of Ø100 mm SS flue with a clamp above the skirt. Cap the top with a woven SS spark screen (3/8″–1/2″ mesh) band-clamped inside the cap.
  10. Handles & pack-down. Mount spring handles on the core sides. Nest chimney sections together; the spare fuel canister can slide over the core for pack-out.

Operation (TLUD mode)

  1. Place stove outdoors on non-flammable ground, 3 m clear radius. Attach chimney + spark screen. Skirt on, pot ready.
  2. Load fuel loosely to the top (twigs/pellets). Add a thin top layer of kindling. Open primary air 50–100%.
  3. Light the top. After 1–2 minutes, visible blue flames should appear at the jets; adjust primary air until the flame is bright with minimal smoke.
  4. Set pot on tabs; drop skirt over pot (keep the 11–15 mm gap). Chimney carries fumes up and away.
  5. When the pyrolysis front nears the bottom (sound changes, flame weakens), remove pot briefly and either quench biochar (water/soil) or dump into a safe metal pan to cool.
Safety: outdoors only. Carbon monoxide is deadly; never use fuel-fired stoves indoors or in enclosed spaces. Keep a fire extinguisher handy; respect local fire bans.

Quick Fuel & Cook-Time Estimator

Energy in fuel (MJ)
Useful heat (MJ)
Cook time @ power (min)

Assumes dry wood ≈ 16 MJ/kg LHV; adjust for your stove & fuel.

Hazards & How Not to Get Owned

  • Carbon Monoxide: lethal; never indoors, garages, or tents. Use outside with wind clearance.
  • Sparks/Wildfire: always run the spark screen; clear 3 m of debris; have water/sand at hand.
  • Hot metal: gloves, long sleeves, eye protection. Let parts cool before pack-down.
  • Materials: avoid galvanized sheet in hot zones (zinc fume risk). Use stainless for flame path.
  • Biochar quench: fully quench and stir; never store warm char in closed containers.

Tools

  • Cutoff saw or bandsaw (SS-capable), drill + step bit, riveter
  • Files/deburr, clamps, square, marker
  • PPE: respirator, safety glasses, leather gloves

Hardware Notes

  • Use SS fasteners in hot/smoky areas; anti-seize on threads.
  • Rivets: SS 3.2 mm for skirt and jacket seams.
  • Grate: aim 35–40% open area to balance draft & ember support.

Sources & References

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