DIY Backpacking Stove: An Ultralight Vortex Burner for Winter Backpacking: Series Outline
- Part 1: Background and Theory
- Part 2:Â Research and Development
- Part 3:Â Mechanical Design
- Part 4:Â Lab & Field Testing
- Part 5:Â Pot Support
Part 2: Research and Development
Introduction
If you haven’t read Part 1 with all the background, do so first. In that part, I first discussed why I wanted to embark on another stove project, a Vortex Burner stove project. Â Then I looked at various early Vortex Burner stoves IÂ made and discussed all the things which I thought were wrong with them. The analysis was fairly light at that stage. Most of what follows comes after I had made and sold my first version ultralight winter stove, and my skills and equipment were increasing.
Part 2 will cover some detailed research and development on the basic Vortex Burner chamber, which I saw as being the most crucial part of the project. The chamber turned out to have a few kinks along the way. I will cover other parts of the design in later parts of this series – with their kinks. I will not be covering the canister connector and the hose as they are exactly as described in the previous series on my first Ultra-light Winter Stove.
One thing I had better mention here before we get going: figuring out what I wanted to build was easy. Figuring out in general terms how I was going to build it was not too bad, but the devil was in the details. Making it manufacturable, rather than be just a one-off, was a key requirement and that was also “interesting.”
Vortex Burner Chamber Design
The part shown is the most visible part of the stove. It features a base plate, the round burner chamber itself sitting on the base plate, and a “splash plate” sitting on top. The splash plate is what stops the jet from going straight up in the air, and it was a bit more tricky to create than I had expected. The design I finally settled on is very close to what I showed in Part 1 of this series.
The burner chamber more or less shapes the rest of the design and the 1.5 in. (38 mm) Ti tubing I had in stock dictated that. Â It wasn’t a bad thing mind you, as I had bought that size of tubing for this project in the first place. It seemed to be (about) the right size for the stove power I was expecting. So I’ll start with the chamber itself. It has a flare at the top, a straight bit in the middle, and a rim at the bottom.
I decided on an approximately 26-degree flare at the top, mainly because the way the flames came out “looked right” during early prototype testing. I tried other angles, but the narrower ones seemed to choke the flame a bit while the wider ones did not seem to improve things. We can skip at least six months of trials and frustrations here, if not more. Anyhow, pushing the tubing too much greater than a 26-degree flare threatened to split the tubing, as shown here. I decided that the top of the 26-degree flare would be 1.9 in. (48 mm) in diameter.
The middle bit is dictated by the overall height I wanted. I experimented with low versions and tall versions and ended up with something about 1.6 in. (40 mm) high. I settled on an allowance of about .2 in. (5 mm) for the turn-in on the bottom rim. That is enormously strong and wide enough for the M2 retaining screws, which I will return in Part 3.
In practice, I allow a shade more for the flare than I need and then I trim the tubing to the exact size on my manual lathe. That only takes a few minutes per unit. An existing mandrel completes the part-holding. It means the finish at the edge ends up very nice and clean and fits the splash plate neatly. It is worth the slight extra effort. I don’t bother machining the inside of the bottom rim; it is not exposed.
In addition to the walls, there is the splash plate on top of the burner chamber to make the fuel/air mix recirculate in a vortex. Commercial stoves usually have a dished splash plate. Â They make dished splash plates out of brass sheets which are easy to shape. A big thump and you finish. I wanted to use the much lighter 6Al-4V Titanium sheet I had – which is much harder to shape. In fact, at the start (in the early days) I found the 6Al-4V alloy was simply too hard to shape with my available technology. As a result, I decided (early on) that the splash plate would (have to) be flat, not dished. That would be so much easier to make, although, in the end, it was not quite that simple. We will come back to this later.
Making the Burner Chamber
So the basic burner chamber design was “settled,” and I already had most of the needed tooling (dies and clamps) for the job from my early experiments; I just had to figure out how to make the flare and the rim smoothly and efficiently. Considerable forces were involved, the drill press was hopeless, and my poor vice was not a good solution. Hammering was just not elegant enough – see the photos in Part 1 for that. The simplest solution was to replace the vice (which did work) with a small hydraulic press, assuming it could generate enough force. After some experiments with a press that belonged to a motor mechanic friend, I bought a small bench-top 10-ton hydraulic press locally. The sales rep assured me it came fully assembled. It turned up quickly, but it was about as assembled as an IKEA prepack, and in a similar flat box. Score one for sales rep knowledge (and my doubts). There were no problems really; it went together easily. I mounted it up on a solid bench.
The flared top end was made using my existing male and female steel dies (turned in my lathe), and it took about 2 tons of force to get the flare snugged into the die. As the two parts of the die both rode on a central core, alignment during pressing was close to perfect. Doing it without the central core guide was not successful. Â The flare always went off-center, sometimes badly. The red line points to the titanium, the green line points to the female/external part of the die, and the blue line to the male part. As the metal stretched during the flaring, it came out smooth anyhow, with just a few ripples at the top edge. These were later turned off in the lathe.
The bottom rim (going inwards) was a shade more complex. I had to get the tube to collapse inwards without creating significant crinkles. And yes, at the start there were lots of crinkles. In the end, I had to use a starter die with a 60-degree taper to get the edges going a bit inwards. I then used a 45-degree taper die to get the rim really turned inwards enough.  Finally, I used a flat steel die to squash the rim down to the flat surface of the core on the inside, ironing out any wrinkles. As I did want a “flat” surface I had to go up to 6 tons of force. That was well beyond what my cast iron vice could manage (so was the 2 tons for the flare, really), but the whole process was quite simple with the hydraulic press.  I followed the steps in my worked-out script. If I did not follow the script carefully, I risked crumpling the other end of the Ti tubing. One learns and hides the failures. It was interesting how all the wrinkles “went away” when squashed with 6 tons. So now I had a manufacturable burner chamber.
The dies started out as some variation on “mild steel,” if there is a such a thing. (In Australia what they call “mild steel” can be any scrap they had lying around at the smelter; it is really very variable stuff). There are some marks on the machined surfaces where the titanium slides over the steel, but these are not yet serious. If the marks get bad, I will have to remake all the dies with a harder steel, but for the moment, a little EP grease works fine. The hardest part of making better dies is buying small quantities of good steel locally. If you want several tons of it, no problem.
So to summarize: the hydraulic press lets me produce quite nice burner chambers. In fact, it is interesting just what sorts of things you can do with a good press. My manual lathe provided the final polish. Next, I needed a base plate and a splash plate.
The Burner Base Plate
In Part 1 I showed a very early triangular Ti base, with edges folded over for stiffness. That proved to be a bit of an overkill, so I switched to a circular base made of .03 in. (0.8 mm) thick 5251 aluminum sheet. But such a thin aluminum sheet is fairly flexible by itself, so I decided to give it a rim. It was not hard to machine a round aluminum disk, clamp it between two machined circular steel plates, and hammer the edges over to make a small rim – which stiffened the whole base wonderfully. 5000-series aluminum is good for this bending and forming. Some problems immediately became apparent when I assembled the first prototype. This base is going to have to sit up in the air a bit. Â It has to stay off the ground, because a) the stove body is underneath the burner base plate (explained later); b) you need room for a handle on the needle valve, and c) the hammering was slow and uneven, and the result looked rather amateur.
First step: get the stove up in the air a bit. I very briefly experimented by using bolt-on legs, but they were boring, clumsy, crude, heavy, and added a lot of complexity to the project. The thought occurred to me that maybe I could cut the nominally circular burner base plate out with the legs already sticking out as part of the rim before I hammered the rim over. Machining such a shape by hand was ridiculous, but doing it by CNC was easy. I could probably even stack up many layers of aluminum and very accurately cut 6 – 8 bases out at once. Production! That’s what led to the photo here.
The first few bases I made had four very simple legs, arranged symmetrically as shown here on the left. Â IÂ eventually found that this arrangement was not all that stable, as the legs were not very far from the center-line. The stove could tip sideways a bit too easily for my liking. I could have rotated the four legs 45 degrees relative to the solid aluminum stove body and cut one leg off to make room for the stove body. Instead, I switched to five symmetrically arranged legs, which greatly improved the sideways stability. Â I then machined off one of the legs to make room for the stove body to stick out (at the front). Well, it works fine, and it was easy to program for the CNC – and it is more stable too.
But I was still hammering these rims over by hand, slowly and painfully and a bit erratically. Late one night as I was going to sleep, the image of the stove base pressed into shape while in my nice new hydraulic press came into my mind. As the inner die was driven down by the ram through an outer die, the legs just popped up from the flat. (Of course, we dream in color video these days). Would this work? Next morning I took a solid lump of old Australian hardwood (and that stuff is hard and tough) and bored it out into a suitable female pressing die. To help the aluminum fold over at the rim more uniformly I made the edge curved rather than sharp. To help the flow of the aluminum over the timber I lubricated the curved edge of the die with hard paraffin wax. That hopefully, would stand up to the forces involved a lot better than oil or grease.
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