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Ice Shack

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Muckin_Slusher

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So you need 6" pipe or can you run smaller? With such a small area to heat it shouldn't take much stove...
I changed stoves. I'm going to use my toy stove. It's got a 4 inch chimney.

I bought some amazon 304 SS exhaust tubing 4 inch and a piece of 12x12" x 2mm 304 stainless and I'm going to weld the tubing through the plate for my flashing.
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driftpin

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That should last a long time. What do you estimate the lifespan of it to be?

I was visiting friends in SW MI, and we were discussing how when we were young, the lake (north of I-94, about 115 miles from Lake Michigan) would freeze-over, and you could drive cars, sleds, and motorcycles on it, because it would be approaching 2 ft thick in places. One of my friends used to borrow his dad's new Torino Cobra Jet, and we would be on the ice in it, zipping-around.

Now it seems that the lake never freezes-over. And there are very-stiff fines for depositing your jeep, truck, or car into the lake.
 
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Muckin_Slusher

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That should last a long time. What do you estimate the lifespan of it to be?

I was visiting friends in SW MI, and we were discussing how when we were young, the lake (north of I-94, about 115 miles from Lake Michigan) would freeze-over, and you could drive cars, sleds, and motorcycles on it, because it would be approaching 2 ft thick in places. One of my friends used to borrow his dad's new Torino Cobra Jet, and we would be on the ice in it, zipping-around.

Now it seems that the lake never freezes-over. And there are very-stiff fines for depositing your jeep, truck, or car into the lake.
I take care of my stuff. This thing should last forever. My other shack is going on 15 years and only maintenance thing I'm having to do is repaint the floor every few years, but now the plywood in the middle is getting a hole dug out. Kids like to slide their chairs around. I'm planning to cut and patch that piece.

My original shack is still on the original runners!
 

hh76

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That should last a long time. What do you estimate the lifespan of it to be?

I was visiting friends in SW MI, and we were discussing how when we were young, the lake (north of I-94, about 115 miles from Lake Michigan) would freeze-over, and you could drive cars, sleds, and motorcycles on it, because it would be approaching 2 ft thick in places. One of my friends used to borrow his dad's new Torino Cobra Jet, and we would be on the ice in it, zipping-around.

Now it seems that the lake never freezes-over. And there are very-stiff fines for depositing your jeep, truck, or car into the lake.
They can last a long time. We still use a couple that my grandfather built in the 40's.
 

hh76

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Not a lot of photos. I'm pretty sure the red one is the oldest. All have had repairs in their long lives.


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Cutting in


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Axle rusted through



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My daughter trying to pull in a speared fish
 
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Muckin_Slusher

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Finally got around to the chimney and stove.

Bent the 12x12 piece of 304 and punched an egg shaped hole with plasma.

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I don't use the big bessey often, but when I do. :smokin:

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Muckin_Slusher

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Glued and screwed a wood box. Really like that I can reach in through the door to fill this one.

Looks real nice when square with the wall, but angled is easier to load, and offers more clearance for the counter top that will go to the left.

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Muckin_Slusher

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Big comfy Costco mattress 39 inch.

I put the mattress on a plywood on my forklift forks and adjusted the height to find the same comfort as sitting in a dining room chair. Turns out 9 inch plywood height was just right.

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Storage tubs fit perfect.

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Muckin_Slusher

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Played the first game of crib with the boy by the fire.

Drafts great/no smoke in the shack.

I do get some buffeting when the fire is young. The door is loose in tracks and rattles back and forth with the pulses. Not sure what the most elegant way to address that is.

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Muckin_Slusher

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So, the sliding door on the stove isn't working out. It's difficult to operate, and the black oily goo residue that forms on the inside of the door smokes when the door is opened (smokes into the shack).

Anyway, converting to a conventional door.

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Muckin_Slusher

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Then realized hinges would be on the wrong side, so fixed that.

I like making the vents like this because you just need to slam the slide and it's 100% closed. Also you can pull the slide out with no tools to clean rust/dirt out of the tracks. It's also easy to adjust in the field by prying the tracks open or hammering them closed.

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Muckin_Slusher

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Upside down ramp inside the firebox so the handle can pull the door tight. Usually homemade stoves have a latch on the outside that doesn't pull the door in tight. This usually results in a stove that you can't shut down enough (always burning too hot).

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Muckin_Slusher

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...and for decoration the top of the stove got a bombardier brake rotor and the side got the old water pump gasket from the sienna.

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Muckin_Slusher

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I love having towing grumps on the shack and on the skandic. It makes connecting and disconnecting instant and painless and cheap (those slings are $10 each). No more need for $30 carabiners or screw shackles that are heavy and cold and freeze.

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Muckin_Slusher

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I was gifted a spineboard and manbasket. It hangs perfectly in some hangers from 2x2x1/4 aluminum tubing.

It makes a great drying/storage shelf and when we need it it'll be there. I just screwed the spineboard to the wall. Won't take much time to unscrew it.

Too bad we didn't have it last year when we found a guy who hit a pressure crack and broke 3 vertibrae.

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hh76

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I love having towing grumps on the shack and on the skandic. It makes connecting and disconnecting instant and painless and cheap (those slings are $10 each). No more need for $30 carabiners or screw shackles that are heavy and cold and freeze.

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Just got done hauling our shanties to the lake for sturgeon spearing season. One of the old shacks is getting pretty rough, and it may be time to replace. I've been contemplating building a lightweight skid house like yours.

How does that style tow in different conditions? Glare ice vs deep snow? Slush?
 

hh76

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Sh*t!, did I miss it?

Just kidding, this is Wisconsin on the Winnebago system. We typically don't hit our quota within the 16 day season.
 
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Muckin_Slusher

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Just got done hauling our shanties to the lake for sturgeon spearing season. One of the old shacks is getting pretty rough, and it may be time to replace. I've been contemplating building a lightweight skid house like yours.

How does that style tow in different conditions? Glare ice vs deep snow? Slush?
They tow great if you build them correctly.

Runners have to be single pieces of plastic (no splices). And the end profiles have to be rounded not mitered.

Always tow with two sleds one behind the other. Three if conditions are terrible. Even though the big skandics can move the shack alone, it's hard on the belt and clutches and trans. Multiple sleds helps you get accross bad spots (glare ice or slush).

I tow with slings, so you have to talk to the other guy pulling because it takes a long, long time for the shack to stop. If you're pulling and one guy just stops, then everything piles up into a train wreck.

On lightweight small shacks I go minimum 16" wide, and on heavy shacks I go 24" wide. The 24s need 3 pieces of wood so the plywood and plastic only span 12" not the full 24"

Skin the underside of the floor joists with the same plastic so when you're up to the joists in slob you don't see as much drag.

I use the 1/4" x 100' rolls of sani-liner. I think it's HDPE. It's made for farmers to line the areas where cattle walk, to keep them from wearing out the walls they rub against.

Don't extend the runners past the walls, (no porches) as it just gives a place for slush and snow to collect.

On glare ice I use my atv with little tires chained up with V-bar diamond pattern chains. The snowmobiles often can't even move because the carbides stick in the ice. I sometimes put ski skins under the carbides to get around this. You won't be able to steer, but you will be able to move...
 
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