I had worked the off shore and remote mountain oulfields for yrs - In the mountains at hiht altitudes it droped to minus 60° F - the radators were on the out side the enclosures - The radiators had electric driven fans that came on when the radiator coolant was to high returning to the engine - Eather way we didnt pull cold air from out side and through a radiator then discharge the air out the engine shack - All sewer lines even below the frost line - were rapped with two heat trace wires - one heat trace was a spare - A 4 inch pipe was rapped with insulation and in a 6 inch pipe. - There were probs in 1/2 pvc pipe down next to the sewer lines down below the frost line - if it droped below 35"F the heat trace came on - All water pipes were heat traced including vent pipes - on the outer 6 inch pvc pipes - they cut the 90" elbows in half and glued and hose clamped in place at the 4 inch 90s and offsetss -
@savvy18038 ай бұрын
You are an extremely HONEST individual Ryan , videos like these are invaluable to those seeking to follow in your footsteps ... thank you Ryan and Von for sharing as always 👍👍👍.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
I appreciate that!😊
@oldcountry2208 ай бұрын
It takes roughly 3yrs to get firewood supply to level that’s comfortable don’t ask how I know also leaving 2-3” space between your rows prevents mould on wood stored over longer periods air must be allowed to circulate all sides found this out the hard way hurts to have to lose mouldy firewood after all the effort getting it. Your honesty is appreciated.
@francismcinnis59958 ай бұрын
One problem is your driving over your septic pipe. Remember when the frost is in the ground and your driving over it , your driving the frost deeper into the ground. Good luck from another old veteran.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
We knew we’d be driving over it and that’s the reason for the foam board insulation. Frost should not be able to penetrate through the 4” of foam board.
@lynsmith26988 ай бұрын
I thought the same thing. Here in northern BC we get -40 almost every year. We buried our line sewer line, four feet down without insulation. It’s one of the few lines that hasn’t t froze. But we never drive over the line. Anyways glad you got it thawed out. The first winter is always the hardest. 🇨🇦🌷ps……we have a Arctic entry and it’s insulated but not heated. We don’t get the frost at all but saying that, we have only had -50C once. Great video guys, you guys rock
@raulmanderson28758 ай бұрын
Wish everyone was this transparent. This is how we all get to learn. I really appreciate how well thought out y'alls homestead is. Underrated channel.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Thank you 😊
@BrianJThomas8 ай бұрын
Hello Ryan, Great Video. One thing that caught my attention, In the attic the placement of the reducer from 3" to 2" needs to be vertical. The reason is with the reducer mounted horizontally the condensate will pool and freeze at the reducer and it will not be able to drain when it thaws. For your generator shed one thought is to place you air inlet closer to the generator. Place intake above the generator on the same wall as your exhaust. Or another idea is to use a greenhouse exhaust fan on a thermostat. Then only exhaust warm air from the building to keep the ambient temp in the building cool enough to remove the waste heat from the generator. This would require you to remove the current hot air exhaust duct and recirculate the air that passes over the radiator back into the room. Greenhouse exhaust fans move a lot of air. I am confident it would be sufficient to keep the air temp low enough for the radiator to work properly. The exhaust fan woul be place as high as possible on the wall above the generator.
@ronniehall15208 ай бұрын
Just a thought for the power shed....enclose your outer shed with the tank in it and duct your exhaust from the generator into the shed and put intake in the outer wall to preheat the air from the exhaust that way you recycle the heat from the exhaust...let us know what you decide...Enjoy watching your journey
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
I like your idea 😊 might be a tad expensive for custom duct work.
@duaneklein49248 ай бұрын
If you didn’t make a mistake or few, you wouldn’t be human. I just like that you two keep at it anyways! Working together you’ll figure it out. Thanks for sharing the good, bad, and ugly. I love the channel because it is real life! Great video
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Thank you 😊
@stevencarey42158 ай бұрын
Ryan, I think the freeze came from your outside clean outs. The pipe will transfer the cold down into your system. You need to maybe heat tape them. Remember hot water will freeze before the cold will
@Chad-DMT8 ай бұрын
A potential fix for the generator issue could be incorporating some heat sensitive louvers like used for greenhouses. Set up in such a way so the air inside the generator shack is circulated inside the shack until it reaches a certain temp and then open slowly so the blast coming in isnt 50 below. Good luck and Im sure you will get it all sorted eventually. ;) Take care
@PoorMansHomesteadCanadaBC19618 ай бұрын
Our clean out was Right at the bottom straight out to the a septic tank
@ck78638 ай бұрын
I appreciate your honesty. That’s how you learn, and I’m also learning along with you.
@karlschreiber72318 ай бұрын
Hi Ryan, Folks learn from others mistake's. Thanks for sharing. I spent 25 years near Nenana in the 60's through the 80's. Doing our own building we ran into many of the same issues. Here are some of the solutions we came up with: 1-Septic system plumbed with wood stave pipe>> won't melt if you need a steam genny. 2- Add a few oatey ABC one way drain/vent valves inside. Won't freeze. Home depot. 3-Use a leach pit instead of lines. The septic tank is really just a holding tank and needs to be pumped each year. Pit allows you access to output if needed. 4-Use insulated 4" vents from exhaust fans. Insulate the fan housing too. 5-Insulate artic entrance and good vaper barrier. Use a little heat. Maybe 40 degrees. 6-No experience with power shed, but you have way too much air flow. I would try dumping some of the engine cooling air from radiator in to power shed. Maybe damper it between inside and outside. Karl
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the tips. It’s good to hear from others that have gone through it.😊
@paulharbron52358 ай бұрын
Hey guys, thanks for the latest update! In reality, your mistakes could have all been way worse, and you have at least now found them. You'll get them all sorted for sure, and your home will be even better as a result. Moving forwards, you will have the peace of mind that the issues you have identified have been resolved at the point in the build where it is easier to do. It will all be worth it once finished. None of us are perfect 🙂 You are doing a fantastic job!
@rainyriverjoe46098 ай бұрын
Hello, northern Minnesota rural homeowner here. Not this winter but most winters we get a -40 stretch. For the most part any water lines you don't want traffic crossing over. No vehicle or foot traffic. It just drives the frost down. Your foam box should help with that. I have a clean out stack like you on my grey water drain. I have opened it and it was completely plugged with frost. Just the stack, not the drain. I suspect that frost grew down and plugged your drain. There should be no standing water in the pipe to your septic tank to freeze. So, maybe building a super insulated box to house your clean out stacks would be a start. I enjoy your videos. I'm a former residential contractor and plan on moving to AK in several years so your videos check several boxes for me.
@wendysingleton95568 ай бұрын
Those beginning aerial views are absolutely gorgeous. ❤
@beckypaddock92088 ай бұрын
Hello to my favorite couple. There’s always a problem when you are a home owner. You two will figure everything out. Stay positive and great attitudes and God will guide you. Have a great week, always wait for your next video.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Yes! Thank you! 😊
@mehardies39997 ай бұрын
Ryan, great video. I love how you shared some of your mistakes which, by the way, don't seem insurmountable. You are keeping it real. I'm not sure if it would meet your ultimate need for a 50' workshop; however, could you possibly repurpose the woodshed to be a small shop and then build the other woodshed that meets your needs? Kind of like a baby step toward your ultimate goal.
@mcarling64952 ай бұрын
Regarding the temperature problems in your generator shed. If you’re sure you’ll never need to run the generator in the summer, then plumb the air intake from the outside to your air filter (don’t draw air from inside the building). Then close the vents that you’ve been using for the radiator and use the air inside the shed for cooling. If you want to be able to use the generator in the summer (as a backup if your solar inverter dies, for example) then move the radiator outside and force air through it with an electric fan. Either way, you don’t want to exhaust all the warm air that has passed through the radiator outside and suck cold air from the outside into your shed to replace the air passing through the radiator.
@kathyhaggerty56178 ай бұрын
Good thing you had that big heater. A lesser man might have been out of business til spring. Good job Ryan
@funtyes19708 ай бұрын
no you can rent or buy a heater like that one. if your pipes are frozen you going do whatever the cost is to fix it. most people can't and won't live with know toilet and bathroom.
@michaelwright97638 ай бұрын
Great video. You have some unique and difficult challenges that make what you are doing very impressive. Keep up the good work.
@bradlimer4258 ай бұрын
Couple ideas: 1. If your really long sewer line thawed that fast, my guess is that your frozen issue was extremely close to the outside clean-outs. Box them up for winter. That is probably the weak point. 2. Put a clean-out in your vent system either in the basement or roof. Easy to open that up and put a blow dryer in the clean-out to thaw it out if it freezes vs. a ladder up the side of the house at -60°.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Good ideas Brad, 😊
@colbyweston50357 ай бұрын
For the power shed, Install something like this above the intake air "Air Curtain Fly Fan Drive Thru | Berner | DTU03"
@mcarling64955 ай бұрын
Regarding the arctic entry. Insulate but don’t heat the arctic entry. The result will be that the arctic entry will be cooler than the house but warmer than outside. Make sure that air can flow freely between the metal roof and the roof sheathing. Air should be able to enter at the eaves (above the sheathing) and vent at the ridge cap.
@DanaUdapp8 ай бұрын
Install the ceiling in the arctic entry and insulate it thoroughly like the rest of the house. The heat from the house will likely escape through the interior wall enough to warm the arctic entry. Chilly, but warm enough. Whether a vestibule in an office building or an arctic entry in your home they both are buffer areas from cold to comfort.
@denisesummers31078 ай бұрын
Thank you so much ! We’re moving in April and will be building our home. These are things we need to know.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Glad I could help a little.
@n411xbushpilot7 ай бұрын
You have a cold roof in the house and without a vapor barrier on the ceiling in the Artic entry and insulate it allows the heat to draw up into the cold roof.
@rosemaryjasper11218 ай бұрын
You’re very honest in your approach to the faults, and the solutions to them. Great video, I’m in the United Kingdom, can’t believe that your pipes froze even though they were sunk well into the ground! I can’t really comprehend it getting that cold! We complain at -10! Love your positive attitude to life and all that it throws at you both❤
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Awesome, thank you!😊
@russellwatters58918 ай бұрын
Heat tape in the future for sure, but I'm not convinced all the clean outs under the house were necessary. I can only surmise the reason for freezing was started at the above ground clean outside, maybe some sort of insulation or box built for winter? The cold air in the generator building would be an expensive fix, to preheat the air and hold it in limbo until use. Ya'll are doing an awesome job in spite of the few "changes". Love ya'll ❤️
@leannekenyoung7 ай бұрын
Wow! That’s how you learn! Sometimes we can do our research in advance but people can get caught up in analysis paralysis and never accomplish anything at least you are building your home and learning as you go and when you make mistakes you work hard to correct them. Thanks for sharing it was very interesting to watch. Yea wood shed closest to your wood stove is definitely important regardless of how it may impact your view. God bless.🥰❤️🙏🏻🇨🇦🍁
@lindagary70778 ай бұрын
We live in Michigan and we have insulated vent pipes to the exterior. And your bathroom vent pipes should have been wrapped with insulation to the outside If you bring the pipe flatter it will just puddle more in the pipe. So the shortest to outside and insulated all the way to the outside.
@travisburkett18838 ай бұрын
Ryan, try a large diameter flex tube going from wall inlet vent up and overhead to the engine even if you have to build a box around the engine. Having frost in the attic, you need to get as much of that out as possible to prevent ceiling damage. Thanks for a great video.
@aspendell2098 ай бұрын
I was wondering when you were going to finish sealing up your power shed. Ideally, you want no outside air entering the building except when you need to cool the building to keep the engine cool. I suggest running an 8" flexible vent pipe from high outside thru the wall and into your air intake for the generator. The generator will then be pulling all its combustion air from outside directly. You will want to wrap the intake pipe with some insulation so that the cold air doesn't cool the interior and create ice on it's way to the air filter.
@larrylaskey90238 ай бұрын
hi ryan, first winter here in mich. all my field and septic froze up. neighbor farmer said because i had no grass growing over area. that summer planted heavy grass. no more freeze the next winter.them heavy grass roots helped. i built house look just like yours. ryan just get nice looking trailer that is covered. back up to wood shed load traier, back up to front porch. should last a couple weeks. you hook to tractor. proud of you guys larry laskey carleton mich
@DanaUdapp8 ай бұрын
Try a thermostatically controlled fresh air damper in your generator room. It really only needs cooler air in the summer when the generator could run too hot.
@Hawaiigeko967898 ай бұрын
Love the drone in the beginning. Beautiful But I missed the smiling one
@vanlifenomadfirekeeper8 ай бұрын
ITS GREAT YOU FIGURED THIS OUR EARLY ON IN YOUR BUILD. You built a Beautiful home.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@n411xbushpilot7 ай бұрын
Wood sheds one for drying and aging the wet wood and wood shed close to a door next to the house with dry aged wood for burning.
@jeffhaayema94008 ай бұрын
Seeing as you just started using your septic system , there is not enough going on in the tank yet , once things start working in there it creates its own heat and should keep the lines from freezing again . And as far as the bathroom fans go , we just dont use ours in the winter and open a window if needed lol.
@stevecollins3758 ай бұрын
You can get heat trace that can run inside the pipe, I ran heat trace through my inside clean out cap with a rubber seal then you can turn it off and on from the inside. No need to dig it all up
@davidmorrisett93438 ай бұрын
Pex is your friend. Coil of pex behind your wood stove. Use glycal need expansion tank use smallest circulation pump use pex wrapped on your waste down stairs with insulation and or going out side to be by septic line. Could put timer for pump to go every now and then. Could put temperature gauge on it going in and out by stove. I live in Chugiak Alaska.
@heiditaylor58966 ай бұрын
Good solid advice for people wanting to build off grid. As I watch this I'm definitely taking notes 😊
@deblikert8 ай бұрын
Hubby suggests reversing the flow through the radiator. Intake from exterior, exhaust inside
@jackallen52407 ай бұрын
Put in a internal heating element inside the pipes which you can plug in anytime you want to. Its like a 1/4 in wire which goes inside the tube.
@anthonysutherland94877 ай бұрын
To keep the room warmer duct the radiator air to the air intake louvred which will bring back the warm air. You only need enough fresh air for the engine intake. The rest of the air intake is the radiator fan flow which can be recirculated.
@gregf57308 ай бұрын
This was a really good video. Not to highlight any mistakes but as a warning for others to learn from these mistakes. I would do as I think your daughter/SIL did by building a pole barn first and putting your RV in it to protect it from the elements during construction is the way to go. It also should provide enough storage to keep almost everything else indoors. Unfortunately all the research someone can do can't prevent every problem and hindsight is 20/20. Keep on with the progress! 🙂
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
We played a very large roll in their decision to build a shop before starting on their house.😊
@DaveSteen7 ай бұрын
My opinion for the generator is to put an air intake to the engine from the outside, in the winter time keep the heat in the building, thermostatically en it out if gets too hot,summer tie is the time to vent the radiator heat out
@WilliamPotter-x6d8 ай бұрын
Hi Ryan, I'd recommend an air to air heat exchanger on the air discharge end of the generator. This will let your hot air discharge preheat your incoming fresh air. This is commonly used on residential HVAC systems. This should cut down on freezing the building in the winter. I hope this helps.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tip!
@jackierandall22308 ай бұрын
Insulate the arctic entryway,and use a smallgas wall heater and keep around 30 to 40 degrees. Love your videos..
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
This seems to be the most popular suggestion, so I suppose this is the direction we’ll head. Thanks👍👍
@briankeithfisher73058 ай бұрын
Much meat in this video Ryan. Just rolling with mistakes made - perfect! Nice work:)
@dpeters77048 ай бұрын
When I lived south of North Pole in AK, my duplex neighbor and I had a foot path in the snow between our doors. Unfortunately, that path meant no fluffy, insulating snow...right over the water and septic lines! Yep, our landlord was not happy. The packed down snow allows the frost to dive down lower than areas with snow cover.
@brianiller27937 ай бұрын
build a wood shed over your septic line to help keep heat over the line.
@donnavickery96238 ай бұрын
You are doing a great job!!! You work like a dog!!! No one could have predicted all these problems !!!
@adrianlaverick80407 ай бұрын
Thank you for the update on lots of stuff! My wife and I are planning our homestead, and you have given us a lot of inspiration for how to go about it (such as doing ICF foundation with an unfinished tall "crawl space"). Something that caused many arguments though is i am adamant that we build the shop first, before any other major structures. Plus i think it would be more comfortable to live in a shop in an RV or something rather than an RV just outside.
@cynshane8 ай бұрын
For the wood shed, use and IBC Tote. You can move it from the porch to the wood shed with the pallet forks, fill up the tote and haul it back to the front porch.
@matthewtrapp77567 ай бұрын
I have experience with generators in very cold climates. You need to reverse your fan to draw air through the radiator backwards, sucking air. Then you can put on a damper operator to ether exhaust the air outside or a second one on the side of the duct opening to the inside of the building to dump warm air from the radiator back inside the building. Hook the two dampers together so they move together one closing while the other opens. Set the temperature on the thermostat so regulate the damper to adjust the heat dumped back in. Hope that makes sense I’m a mechanic not a writer lol
@mcarling64955 ай бұрын
Instead of venting the plumbing to the outside, you can use an air admittance valve.
@JoyceCorbett8 ай бұрын
i think you are doing a great job, i like that you show the good and the bad look forwarded to next week
@edwardbickford46668 ай бұрын
Great video! Disclaimer I don’t plan on moving there myself but in early years experienced some of your issues. While what you have had to fix may seem boneheaded in hindsight there are millions that would have done the same or worse. Keep doing what you’re doing. Smart people😮will listen and thank you.
@mathewjaycox8438 ай бұрын
I would also suggest your sewer vent go up at a 45 degree angle just aid int the airflow.
@charlenegrady87818 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing Ryan. Good job fixing everything up👍✌️🇺🇸❤️❤️
@marilynfraser49257 ай бұрын
Beautiful scenery! Thanks for sharing.
@morriswilcox58828 ай бұрын
Off set the rad for the gen set and use electronic rad fan on rad and then duct it in . Air in the shed will remain in the shed than and air for the rad is in and out .
@PoorMansHomesteadCanadaBC19618 ай бұрын
My dad put a clean out in front of every 90 degree corner
@n411xbushpilot7 ай бұрын
I really like your video Ryan, Power House Generator hot cold problem turn the generator 90 degrees so it draws cold in on the left side of the building and blows hot out the right side of the building put a interior wall with a door.
@garyprice59518 ай бұрын
Thank you for showing us a lot of people wouldn't, this will help someone for sure. We all make mistakes cause we can't know it all at least u all are doing it urself great job
@SandraCrockett8 ай бұрын
Nailed It!. Thank You for bringing us along for the ride!
@michaelbigler46307 ай бұрын
Put the 4 inch pipe inside a bigger pipe ( 6 or 8 ) with two pipes to the surface that way you can pull a heat tape through or change out the tape if it stops working.
@mathewjaycox8438 ай бұрын
You could put a exhaust fan into the ceiling that is activated when the door is opened.
@karenedge70398 ай бұрын
Y'all are doing amazing. I love your videos !! Hey, we all made slight mistakes, Im glad you showed them because I didnt know that either.
@robmosier42898 ай бұрын
I’m just not sure about the cleanouts under the house. Seems like they would be a lower than the toilet point and you would have a face full of black water in your face if you ever have to open one if there is a backup down stream. Love the channel and it is always great to follow what you and the Mrs are doing. Thank you for sharing this one. Has me in deep thought over cold weather plumbing needs.
@SI-lg2vp8 ай бұрын
Looks like you should add more attic insulation with all that cold winter conditions.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
It’s in the works for this summer.
@Justice1911A18 ай бұрын
Great solutions to your issues, keep up the great work 💜 from 🇦🇺
@donaldbyrd99218 ай бұрын
Put a temp senoer on out side and set it to the building get warmer and then the out vent will open
@naturefreq43257 ай бұрын
Ive made alot of mistakes. 1 lesson i learned is never use osb once it freezes and thaws it "pops" the glue and fiber and makes it nothing but a worthless moldy sponge after a couple seasons. #2 is your walls and roofing using 2x6s is not nearly enough to control the transfer of heat to cold.
@clrd4tkoff7 ай бұрын
Great Video!! Thank you for sharing all the mistakes you made and how you fixed them! 👍🏻👍🏻 What you're doing is amazing so I'm sure things will come up in the future but you'll work through them! 👍🏻
@rockylockhart73018 ай бұрын
Can you delay the vent from opening, after the generator is running to warm up the room and heat up the extended cold air vent which would be insulated. It seems the air coming in is so cold the frost happens immediately so hopefully heating up an extended insulated vented area may help.. just a thought
@thomasplummer26738 ай бұрын
Hi guys, i lived in the mountains of PA and most people wouldn't think PA could get to -38 F ,wind chill -60 F but it did and froze our septic tank because we didnt have any snow cover. We had to move out for 2 months. We lived at 3000 ft. One step forward and 2 backward, that's how I learned to dance😂😂
@Nannygoat8 ай бұрын
Ohhh wow lots of frost but no doubt yall will get it solved. Love the scenery at the beginning of the film. .
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Thank you, it’s a learning curve but we’ll figure it out.
@Nannygoat8 ай бұрын
Yes you will! I do love your windows guys. Triple pane!
@kerimorgan28 ай бұрын
loved this video and love y’all!! the beauty is you can go back and fix and correct or make your lives easier with another wood shed. i think i would rather have two different places for firewood anyaway just incase! looking forward to seeing the land clearing of a shop but agree yall are so close to having the house finished it will make yall feel better with a win under your belt!
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Definitely!!😁
@ScotMcClure8 ай бұрын
Hey Ryan and Von.. great channel ! Where we live it gets -20--30° F and the ceiling fart fans in the humid bathrooms always create leaks from the humidity and sometimes stalactites on the attic ceiling if not buried in 2' of insulation. We gave up on them and went to the worst of 2 evils and installed a through the exterior wall fan with louvers. Good luck and whatever you do insulate the crap out of it.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tip. Hope we can figure something out.😊
@eddygoodwin70898 ай бұрын
Seams like you could just run a pvc air intake that would run directly to the air cleaner. And only let the big air intake when it gets over a set temp inside. Awesome setup that’s nice generator
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
Good option have to do some thinking on a bunch of these comments. Thank you.
@jeffsizemore68698 ай бұрын
Great video Learn from your mistakes. Fix it an move on Everybody makes mistakes. It takes a big person to admit it
@prus38878 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing! It’s interesting to see how extreme cold weather affects things that in normal cold climates you wouldn’t give a 2nd thought. My suggestion for bringing in wood to the house.. as a kid we always brought the wood in thru the closest window by the wood stove so that we would track the carp through the house.
@Kassandra-j6h8 ай бұрын
I love y’all!
@mikechmarnakis21038 ай бұрын
You live and learn a lot of people will learn from your mistakes Ryan. What i really enjoy from your videos is what makes Ryan and Von happy, Taco at delta junction cold weather outside rabbit stew I think you should have more of that even if you fats forward cutting and stocking wood i will watched for sure. I like your stress free approach.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
I appreciate that!😊
@rodneycox94298 ай бұрын
Just run a a couple ducts for fresh air intake and exhaust for the generator.
@pinkywilliams80638 ай бұрын
Always a learning curve when building a homestead, even more issues in the frozen tundra where you are at.... Thanks for sharing Ryan...
@moniquevelasco208 ай бұрын
Well done!!! The important thing is to fix the problem and you just did. Love and be safe!🤗😘🌼🇻🇪
@n411xbushpilot7 ай бұрын
If you turned the generator 90 degrees the incoming air and outgoing air on that side end of the shed. And put something up to keep that space just for running the generator. Just maybe it that might work
@lindaschramm82698 ай бұрын
In the shed with the generator I think when it's below zero you would have less trouble buy diverting the radiator heat, left in the shed rather than pushed out. Then less fresh air would be pulled in.
@wildwoodoffgridalaska8 ай бұрын
That’s a good idea but when it stays in the shed, it’s like a hurricane in there.😊
@audung788 ай бұрын
Digg down under frost boarder whit air channel to the building or make a heat exchanger
@got2b4now7 ай бұрын
Great video! So helpful for others as they might be building. Just an fyi we had a heated arctic entry with insulated ceiling in our cabin in AK - attic was open and very similar to yours - did not have bathroom fan type vents - also used heat tape on sewer and water (outside well source, not like yours). Only turned it on as needed.
@louis05408 ай бұрын
You Should try to find a Military Herman -- Nelson Heat Heater. They run on Diesel without electricity. People who have never lived in Alaska don't realize what problems extreme low temperatures cause. I have some horror stories for the time I spent in Alaska.
@jimmyjohnstone58788 ай бұрын
Fixing mistakes is a pain but nothing too bad has happened. The cold air into the generator cabin is one which is difficult to fix without spending money on preheating the air. If the generator was nearer the house you could use waste heat from the stove chimney maybe with some pipes winding around it to act as heat exchanger for the air to then feed into the generator. With your house distance from the shed that's not feasible.
@MyAlaska128 ай бұрын
oh, and for the firewood, completely fill your wood shed and then have a nice stack of logs right beside the wood shed just in case you need extra wood. Then it is already staged and ready.
@mainelife42688 ай бұрын
it will be tougher on the generator however if you direct vent to the intake of the generator then it alone feels the cold. my oil burner is hooked that way. you then stop exchanging inside are from the outside. i have done the same with wood stoves. that stops them from getting their air from the cracks and crevices.
@thebear54548 ай бұрын
Oh Boy Ryan...I forecast a lot of digging in your future. Definitely a learning curve on this one. Good luck
@PoorMansHomesteadCanadaBC19618 ай бұрын
You need to put a wood box attached to your house make it into a bench lift up the bench pull your wood out of the bench that's on the inside of your house you load it from the outside less mess in the old Days woodsheds was on the back porch My dad's witch shed was 10 feet away from the house along one side of the house our wood stove was downstairs so all she did was throw the wood down the stairs open the basement door and there's wood Pile underneath the house
@lindabokdalen84398 ай бұрын
Always looking forward for your videos. Greetings from Sweden 😊