Jeff,
Here is the response I received after posing your question to a former intern who has a lot more experience in char production than I do:
From the pictures it looks like he is fighting against the draft. Hot
air will always want to rise with respect to colder air. In the UHDP
pictures, you can see the barrels are set up on thin bricks to give a
few inches of head, and the firebox is flat on the ground. the wood is
also stacked on a grate to give free air movement below so that the hot
air passes under (and then rises into) the wood “baking” it. You always
want the biomass above the heat source and free upward air movement from
firebox through the barrel and out the chimney. You want your firebox
below your open space in the barrel, your open space in the barrel
(below the wood) below your chimney hole, and the wood all above the top
of the chimney hole (if possible).
Jeff’s system seems to have the fire box pretty high with respect to the
biomass he is trying to bake. My experience is that it even works better
than the UHDP method if you dig your firebox 6" to 1’ (or more if
practical) below the bottom of the barrel. this helps force the draft
through the system on startup.
Because of the thermal expansion and heat and associated chimney
dynamics, the relationship between air intake cross-section and chimney
cross-section is not at all linear. Small changes in stack (chimney)
height make huge differences in draft on the intake side. If I have
trouble getting a batch going, adding another 10’ of chimney will draw
the fire into the box wonderfully. Once the system is nice and hot I can
remove the extra and install vinegar collection system.
I would also put in a word of caution: the tars, gasses, and partially
pyrolized material associated with the charcoal making process can be
very toxic and persistent in soils. for agricultural/ soil amending
purposes I would not “make in place”. If you do, I would leave it open
at the end so that it cooks hot and clear for a while (losing much of
the char to ash) to ensure what is left is just pure carbon. Tars and
mineralized carbon (charcoal) can stay in soils for millennia - not
ideal if it is partially pyrolized and toxic.
Additionally, the vast majority of the long term benefit of biochar is
biologically related and is effective at very small percentages of the
overall soil. ideally clean, fully carbonized charcoal is
composted/inoculated/nutrient-charged and strategically placed in
(relatively) small increments as a platform for biology. In place
production will heat and kill any biology in the area, which is not ideal.
As Brad Ward discovered in his trials, because of the high energy
pyrolysis process, the charcoal is left strongly electrically charged,
and if it is placed as non-nutrient-charged/non-inoculated charcoal it
will “steal” nutrients from the nearby soils until they have reached
capacity. Often folks experience a strong negative affect on plant
growth for the first several years after placing
non-nutrient-charged/non-inoculated char.
Regarding the Tech Note, after reading through it I think it is mostly
correct (though I don’t fully agree with the promotion of charcoal over
traditional 3-stone), but not always super clear on the nuts and bolts
side. The venting discussed is referring to the vinegar collection
process, and the goal is to get the temperature back up hot to burn off
any residual tar after the long slow/cooler process of vinegar
collection. The entire process is definitely exothermic (if done
correctly) until after the chamber is sealed and all of the oxygen has
been consumed. The key is to not close up until it is clear and hot
coming out of the chimney to ensure that all of the tar has been burned
off.