This video can help to get anyone in the Christmas mood. On video 2 hours of real burning of a fireplace from the moment of ignition to almost hollow burnout of fuel. This fireplace is closely associated with Christmas and new year holidays. What could be better than a quiet winter evening spent by the fire fireplace made with their own hands? Live fire, Christmas music. Warm and cozy.
But the main idea of his creation of this video was somewhat different.
For many years I have been heating my stove with RUF fuel briquettes from dust and find this fuel optimal for myself. Many call them EURODRIVE. This video debunks some myths about RUF fuel briquettes.
The first myth is that briquettes are difficult to ignite. As you can see from the video I need three sheets of A4 paper and one match to ignite the briquettes. Properly Packed well good briquettes ignite without any additional ignition. The main thing is not to blow out the fire with a strong thrust until the briquettes RUF will not take.
The second myth-briquettes burn quickly and do not have time to warm up the stove. The video was shot in one plan and the burning time of 6 RUF briquettes with effective heat output was 2 hours. And efficient combustion occurs in a closed podduvalom.
The third myth-briquettes in the fireplace do not burn beautifully. Well, you just do not know how to cook them :) Beautifully laid briquettes, in my opinion, burn beautifully.
Since the video shows the real process without gluing and mounting it can be used for a detailed study of the stages of burning briquettes RUF of dust. Burning smokeless and it is visible that almost all combustible material passes into heat. Quality pellets just melt like sugar cubes in hot tea. Leaving no more than 1% ash from the original weight of the briquette. This property of fuel briquettes RUF of dust allows you to raise the efficiency of any even inefficient stove. Pyrolysis occurs directly in the combustion zone and does not require additional design features of the heating device for afterburning the gases emanating from the heating of wood.