I've got the standard department store 3 piece stove/fireplace tool set. Had it for years. I've always hated that stupid little ash shovel. What should be a 1 minute job turns into 10 minutes. My plans for today got cancelled, so I figured it was time to rectify this little annoyance. First step was to cut a fire brick to size to get rid of that little ash hole/drawer plug ear in my 30NC so the bottom of the stove doesn't have that stupid cleaning obstruction in the bottom of it. I never use it anyway. Second...build a shovel that isn't the size of a child's beach toy. 1/2" round solid handle. a piece of 20 gauge sheet metal. a piece of 1/8" 1 1/2" angle iron to support the back, and a piece of 1/8" flat bar for the leading edge. All pieces of scrap that I've picked up off various job sites. Paint er flat black...done. I put the shovel from my 3 piece set beside it for size comparison. Ignore the welding job. My mig welder isn't exactly the best machine for doing anything with thin sheet metal...and I don't claim to be a great welder. LOL.
Nice work! I tend to find that the tools we really need are not usually made and available to purchase. So, you modify or make what you need. I need to find an ash shovel at a yard sale/ CL whatever, and cut the bottom out and weld in a wire mesh so I can separate the ashes from the coals.
I like the long handle on yours. I'm currently using this hamburger spatula. It’s chromed..... sorta.
I made something like that and found that it made so much dust while using it that i reverted to just stirring the hell out of the ash in the stove so the coals would come to the top.... less messy.
Yeah, maybe. I think a little tweak might keep the ash down. Instead of lifting up the coals, maybe make it at more like a rake. As in the wire mesh is the tines of the rake, and you just pull the coal rake forward. Then all the ash stays in back and can then be shoveled out.
I am planning on using my ash pan this year. I used it for the first time and was amazed at how little fly ash came out raking it down through the hole. My Madison has a cast iron plug for the hole. Last year I would shovel the ash from the stove into a pan; and no matter how careful I was to take the shovel to the ash in the pan and very slowly slid the ash off the shovel I saw fly ash floating around. Then there was the times I would hit the coal lip on the front of the stove.
I emptied the stove for the first time today since building the super ash shovel. 2 scoops, and she was clean. I did have to up the size of my ammo can (ash can). Fortunately, I had one that's longer than average with locks on both ends. The lid lifts right off. The whole scooping out operation took less than a minute...closer to 30 seconds I'd say. I love it when things work as designed.
You and I must be sharing the same shovel HD ... Mines just like your's, That's a scary thought how some of us think alike!