Durability Testing at SSM
I just returned to the Oregon lab from a two-week visit to Shengzhou Stove Manufacturer. The next few newsletters will be about SSM and progress made. There’s a lot to talk about! SSM has sold over 5 million stoves and the factory is a wonderful place to visit.
SSM started testing stoves for durability twenty-four hours a day (three eight hour shifts at a nearby farming community) three years ago. The farmers keep fires going in eight SSM stoves and the tests continue for one year of each stove. That’s 8, 860 hours.
It’s great that SSM has been doing long term, real life testing of their stoves. Previously, tests in a kiln with wet, salted pieces of metal resulted in confusing estimates of durability. In 2017, M.P. Brady and T.J. Theiss shocked the stove world by showing that in a wet, salty, hot kiln even very expensive metals were not long lasting. (Energy for Sustainable Development 37 (2017) 20–32, “Alloy Corrosion Considerations in Low-Cost, Clean Biomass Cookstoves for the Developing World”, Michael P. Brady, et al.).
The SSM testing is being written up. It seems to show much longer durability of various combustion chamber metals when real fires are used. Full details to follow.
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