When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: cheapest homefire smokeless coal stove

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Breeo Vs. Solo Stove: I Put the Best-Selling Smokeless Fire ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/breeo-vs-solo-stove-put...

    Jillian Quint. TOTAL: 92/100 I’ve had my Solo Stove for about three years, and it has held up remarkably well. I love how easy it is to use—you just add wood, light it and rejoice at the ...

  3. Smokeless fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smokeless_fuel

    One of its consequences was the development of smokeless fuels, designed specifically to reduce the amount of noxious smoke produced, and to remove some impurities such as sulphur in the coal. Such manufactured fuels also burnt at a higher temperature, being a better and more efficient fuel for open fires as well as stoves .

  4. Solo Stove review: Nearly smokeless, if you know what you're ...

    www.aol.com/news/solo-stove-review-nearly...

    Some of my most nostalgic childhood memories were evenings spent around the fire pit in my family's backyard, a humble ring of slate slabs hand-stacked around a shallow hole. When picked clean of ...

  5. We Tried a Bunch of Smokeless Fire Pits — These Are ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/tried-bunch-smokeless-fire...

    Bonfire 2.0 Smokeless Fire Pit. Solo Stove’s Bonfire 2.0 is an update to the Bonfire we previously tested, now including a removable ash pan. While its smokeless performance remains unchanged ...

  6. Energy poverty and cooking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_poverty_and_cooking

    This is the cheapest stove to produce, requiring only three suitable stones of the same height on which a cooking pot can be balanced over a fire. Improved cook stoves (ICS), often marketed as "clean cookstoves", [ 29 ] are biomass stoves that generally burn biomass more efficiently than traditional stoves and open fires.

  7. Sigri (stove) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigri_(stove)

    A piece of cow dung (perhaps soaked in kerosene) is then lit and inserted through the hole in the side of the Sigri, below the iron rods. The Sigri is then left in a well-ventilated area until it stops emitting smoke, once up to temperature it will produce a smokeless heat. During this period it is necessary to occasionally stoke and fan the Sigri.