By placing the fire and chimney on opposite sides of the house and constructing a tunnel between them, heat is pulled through the tunnel, heating the floors and helping distribute heat more evenly.
Note: caused a significant number of house fires and carbon monoxide poisoning.
You mean putting an open flame under a house could be a safety concern?
I figured there were some issues like that, I think I'm more into the general idea than this specific execution
Radiant heat using pumped hot fluid (I think usually a water antifreeze mix in a closed system) in tubes attached to the underside of the floor, seems like the closest, safer mix. Could be reasonably solarpunk if the source of heat is good
Did you just invent UFH? 😂
No, just recommending it since it sounds like what they're looking for. Some of my relatives have a house with it
Heat pumps are significantly more efficient than fire. Using a heat pump with a high r-value house will keep you toasty without the issues.
Piping it through the floor means you'd have the same radiant heat.
Yeah, it might be better to have it be a boiler system instead, with water piped around the house. Or since the house will have the heating in mind during construction, then make the heat source centralized with proper insulating house walls.
I'd like to learn more about the Goodlejang, Guemdol, Gaejari, Bunumgi, Jae-Agungi, Butu-mak, and Ondol Floor please.
Search it up on goodle
A very similar system was used by the Romans. They called it hypocaust.
Woah-oh Black Betty Goodlejang Woah-oh Black Betty Goodlejang
AKA a rocket stove
No, a rocket stove is a heating chamber with insulation around it to direct the heat to the top and heat up a pot or something similar. This is a heating system for a house.
Put a pot over the chimney.
Rocket house stove.
The pot in this system is the butu-mak. While there might not be an internal chimney like a rocket stove, this kinda looks like a rocketless rocket mass heater.
So having an open flame roaring below your floor boards is fine, but leaving a fan on in a closed room isn't?
How did they get the house to float though?
as far as i'm aware (not korean, never been there, just an internet weirdo) ondol heating of a sort is still used for the floors in korea. i assume it's more of a radiator system now though?
Yes. (Linked article is Korean)
Modern ondol systems use piped hot water. One of the pleasures of being in Korea in winter is finding a literal hot spot to sit or lie on, since the heating is not perfectly even.
I like the Hangul and then "Chimney" and "Wind Protectioner".
Fußbodenheizung
Für alles gibt es in Deutschland ein Wort, außer für den Fakt, dass es für alles ein Wort gibt.
Daraus könnten wir das Jugendwort des Jahres 2024 machen!
Füralleseinworthabenung
A traditional method for asphyxiation via carbon monoxide.
We have modern variations like this which are less dangerous and could be modified to work well within the solarpunk paradigm. Induction heating where the water is ran through pipes under the floor for example, there are some who have used solar water heaters on the roofs of the home to heat the water for this process, without needing to use an extensive amount of gas.
How is airflow achieved? In a traditional fireplace (or rocket stove) hot air rises up a hot chimney to draw smoke up or create pressure to push smoke through some ducts. How is that happening here?
It's not totally clear from the diagram, but I think the fire pit itself is outside the house. The air naturally ducts underneath the floor of the house and then up the chimney in the back. There's still a chimney effect, but it gets redirected under the floor first.
You mean… fire?
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Monolingual moment 💀
Haven't seen this boring old racism for a while. You could at least try
All words are made up.
Facebook is that way, boomer