dgdm
01-03-2016, 08:48 PM
Hi there, been searching through here to try and figure out some plans prior to attempting a build, never made any syrup before but figured rather than buy a bunch of steam pans and spending time rigging something up I might as well start with something halfway decent. I liver on 200 acres and have about 35 tappable sugar maples and 65 acres of silver maple swamp, planning to focus on the sugars and maybe hit some of the more accessible silvers if I feel inclined. here are my plans thus far:
1- use a 23" x 5' oil tank cut it in half, possibly leaving a piece at the back for attaching the chimney, haven't decided if it is worth the loss of space for the pans rather than coming off rear with an elbow
2- bought a barrel stove kit for doors and attaching chimney, gonna salvage some cast grates from a completely rusted arch in a sugar shack in some woods I know of, and as much fire brick as I can dig out of the ground around it, anything else I can find too.
3- thinking of installing it permanently in an old stove shed on the property. the prior owner fixed it up real nice, insulated the roof and lined in rough pine, new windows all around and a woodstove. I am a little nervous about mucking it up with boiling sap, but it is otherwise unused. I was going to install my arch on the steel woodstove chimney which is 6 inches, there is a tall window nearby that could eventually be used for exhausting a hood if I ever decide to build one.
4- planning on lining firebox with fire brick, welding in a ramp to direct fire to pans and insulating with roxul, similar to other plans i have seen here
5- a friend has agreed to build me a pan, he will likely give me a very good deal on it so I want to be modest in my design to not take advantage of his generosity. will ask for 18 or 20 gauge stainless, all welded.
6- pan design right now would be with two lengthwise dividers in the back running 3.5 feet long and a 18" section at the front for syrup. I feel a little guilty asking for big dropped or raised flues because of the amount of material and welding involved, thinking of asking for the bottom to be corrugated in "W" pattern as I assume this would be simpler and cheaper for him to fabricate but still have the benefit of increased surface area, likely double the surface area of a flat pan.
7- heres a crazy idea that I have not come across before, thinking of designing pan so I can use it for canning, a 1 litre mason jar is 7 inches high, a 10 inch deep pan would let me make a huge amount of canned apple sauce in one large batch (I really like apple sauce)
Questions
1- any general comments about the plan (good, bad, ugly)?
2- is it worthwhile to make flow reversible with valve or plugs or something?
3- will I regret not getting really deep flues made, will the corrugated pan design be a good compromise?
4- will it be a mistake converting my stone shed into sugar shack
5- how much gap to leave between bottom of pan and arch
6- how big a firebox to build (depth, height)
7- I assume most people make a lip around the outside edge of the pan to sit on an angle iron skirt on the arch. how deep should i set the pan into the arch? was thinking about half way for stability, do you supply any other support for the pan such as cross members inside the arch (heat would likely ruin these anyway)?
8- anything you might recommend I have not considered?
thanks for any/all thoughts, I have a couple of months to get it together so need to get started, need to get the arch design finalized so I can size the pan and get it made in time.
thanks,
Dave
1- use a 23" x 5' oil tank cut it in half, possibly leaving a piece at the back for attaching the chimney, haven't decided if it is worth the loss of space for the pans rather than coming off rear with an elbow
2- bought a barrel stove kit for doors and attaching chimney, gonna salvage some cast grates from a completely rusted arch in a sugar shack in some woods I know of, and as much fire brick as I can dig out of the ground around it, anything else I can find too.
3- thinking of installing it permanently in an old stove shed on the property. the prior owner fixed it up real nice, insulated the roof and lined in rough pine, new windows all around and a woodstove. I am a little nervous about mucking it up with boiling sap, but it is otherwise unused. I was going to install my arch on the steel woodstove chimney which is 6 inches, there is a tall window nearby that could eventually be used for exhausting a hood if I ever decide to build one.
4- planning on lining firebox with fire brick, welding in a ramp to direct fire to pans and insulating with roxul, similar to other plans i have seen here
5- a friend has agreed to build me a pan, he will likely give me a very good deal on it so I want to be modest in my design to not take advantage of his generosity. will ask for 18 or 20 gauge stainless, all welded.
6- pan design right now would be with two lengthwise dividers in the back running 3.5 feet long and a 18" section at the front for syrup. I feel a little guilty asking for big dropped or raised flues because of the amount of material and welding involved, thinking of asking for the bottom to be corrugated in "W" pattern as I assume this would be simpler and cheaper for him to fabricate but still have the benefit of increased surface area, likely double the surface area of a flat pan.
7- heres a crazy idea that I have not come across before, thinking of designing pan so I can use it for canning, a 1 litre mason jar is 7 inches high, a 10 inch deep pan would let me make a huge amount of canned apple sauce in one large batch (I really like apple sauce)
Questions
1- any general comments about the plan (good, bad, ugly)?
2- is it worthwhile to make flow reversible with valve or plugs or something?
3- will I regret not getting really deep flues made, will the corrugated pan design be a good compromise?
4- will it be a mistake converting my stone shed into sugar shack
5- how much gap to leave between bottom of pan and arch
6- how big a firebox to build (depth, height)
7- I assume most people make a lip around the outside edge of the pan to sit on an angle iron skirt on the arch. how deep should i set the pan into the arch? was thinking about half way for stability, do you supply any other support for the pan such as cross members inside the arch (heat would likely ruin these anyway)?
8- anything you might recommend I have not considered?
thanks for any/all thoughts, I have a couple of months to get it together so need to get started, need to get the arch design finalized so I can size the pan and get it made in time.
thanks,
Dave