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  2. Banya (sauna) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banya_(sauna)

    The heater has three compartments: a fire box that is fed from the entrance room, the rock chamber, which has a small hole to throw the water into and a water tank at the top. The top of the water tank is usually closed to prevent vapour from infiltrating the banya. Water from a bucket is poured over the heated rocks in the stove.

  3. Sauna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sauna

    [30] [31] When pouring water onto the stove, it cools down the rocks, but carries more heat into the air via advection, making the sauna warmer. Perspiration is the result of autonomic responses trying to cool the body. Users are advised to leave the sauna if the heat becomes unbearable, or if they feel faint or ill.

  4. Folklore of Finland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folklore_of_Finland

    The traditional Finnish sauna is a wooden structure, usually made of logs, and is a separate building or room within a larger building. The sauna room is typically heated by a wood-burning stove or an electric heater, and the heat is generated by pouring water over heated rocks. This creates steam and humidity.

  5. Finnila's Finnish Baths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finnila's_Finnish_Baths

    There were two large traditional Finnish-style sauna-bathing rooms, one for women and another one for men. Both the women's and the men's sauna could accommodate about a dozen customers at a time. Throwing water on the hot rocks provided the hot steam for the baths. There were large shower and dressing rooms separately for the ladies and for ...

  6. Culture of Finland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Finland

    In Finnish saunas, temperature is set to about 60–100 °C (sometimes up to 120 °C), and small amounts of water thrown on rocks atop the stove emit steam, which produces a heat sensation. Some Finns prefer the "dry sauna" using very little steam if any. Traditional sauna includes the process of perspiring and cooling several times.

  7. Finnish sauna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finnish_sauna

    One specific and rarely seen curiosity is use of a wood pellet burner to heat a smoke sauna stove (savukiuas), typically the actual burner installed into a room adjacent to the actual sauna room and the kiuas. A wood pellet burner, quite similar to an oil burner, is then used to heat a smoke sauna stove - practically a big pile of rocks.

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