Instant light spraying oil Burner from cheap, off the shelf fittings

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • This burner is easy to build with off the shelf and easily found parts. It works similar to a babbington type but is a simpler design still.
    While many pressurized burners use expensive Delevan siphon type nozzles, this Spray burner can be made using regular fittings and can deliver a wide range of outputs.
    It requires only one valve for the fuel flow and can run on a variety of fuels from waste oil to diesel, kerosene or turps. It is shown running on and lighting up on straight used veg oil with no additives. The tank is pressurized to 15-20 PSI but can be higher or lower according to the heat output required.
    Please click the like button if you enjoyed this vid and don't forget to check out the other vids on my channel.

Комментарии • 676

  • @lynthie8920
    @lynthie8920 9 лет назад +2

    Now this is something that you could use to make an oil burner heated deep fryer with, mount the cooker far enough away from the dragon-breath side and it would be able to work just fine.
    Use old oil to heat new oil to cook in that will, over time, become used, which would then be burned to heat new oil... The circle of FIRE...
    Glad your uploading videos again.

  • @danieltothero1413
    @danieltothero1413 3 года назад +8

    This video has to be my favorite one of all, especially during the ignition and burning phase. The oil and air mix easily and then the square tubing facilitates the flame via a Venturi effect. I love the howling noise it makes too.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  3 года назад +6

      I was just looking at this setup yesterday thinking I should do another vid with it. Needs some new plastic Tubing which I don't know if I have or can get but I will look into doing another vid of it soon.

    • @danieltothero1413
      @danieltothero1413 3 года назад +2

      @@glumpy10 I would definitely watch another video with this setup if you get a chance.

  • @samsiryani9023
    @samsiryani9023 Год назад +2

    It’s 7 years later and still think it’s very cool.

  • @jimmartin7899
    @jimmartin7899 8 лет назад +3

    Take a round steal tub wrap copper capillary tubes around it with water running through it. Feed perlite heat sink barrels to keep your water hot and lay heart hose in the floor of your home to heat it. You could produce a steady electric current with heat transducers has well to run your home.

  • @heliarche
    @heliarche 4 года назад +6

    I've just built one of these. Not the exact same thing but same theory. Works like a charm. Within an hour of getting it finally assembled I was melting aluminum. I think I used about 4 gallons of used engine oil in an hour. It's not very demanding on my air compressor. I'm using 3/16" lines because that's what I had laying around. I think if I want to go hotter I have to go with bigger lines. Awesome build and awesome video. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @patmancrowley8509
    @patmancrowley8509 4 года назад +16

    Sitting here I was looking for a lighter for my pipe. I see that you've found a pipe for your lighter! Brilliant, mate. Great video!

    • @jamircoen649
      @jamircoen649 3 года назад +1

      i dont mean to be so off topic but does any of you know of a trick to get back into an Instagram account?
      I was stupid lost my account password. I would appreciate any assistance you can give me

    • @masonarturo6002
      @masonarturo6002 3 года назад +1

      @Jamir Coen Instablaster :)

    • @jamircoen649
      @jamircoen649 3 года назад +1

      @Mason Arturo thanks for your reply. I found the site through google and I'm trying it out now.
      I see it takes a while so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.

    • @jamircoen649
      @jamircoen649 3 года назад +1

      @Mason Arturo it did the trick and I finally got access to my account again. Im so happy:D
      Thanks so much, you really help me out !

    • @masonarturo6002
      @masonarturo6002 3 года назад +1

      @Jamir Coen glad I could help =)

  • @peterroberts5835
    @peterroberts5835 8 лет назад +3

    huge thanks for uploading this video, been put off building my own spray type nozzle furnace for melting cast iron as all the ones i have seen use expensive fiddly bought in ones with loads of needle control valves for everything.i can see why you would want loads of control and the ease of buying in a valve but i couldn't see the simpler way to build one and now i can. many thanks again, keep up the good work !

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад +1

      +The Home Machinist You are welcome. Its very rewarding to know people are putting these ideas to work and benefiting from them. Really makes it all worth while. If you are able to video what you make, please let me know when you have. it's great to see what people do in action.

    • @peterroberts5835
      @peterroberts5835 8 лет назад

      +Oil Burner HI oil burner, have built my nozzle, using gravity syphon feed, problem is it seems to be blowing out both nozzle and feed pipe. if i take nozzle out works great at syphoning but rubbish at atomising/ misting. i am using waste commercial veggie oil. playing with the pressure seems to do nothing. only thing i can thing of is using pressure feed for oil like in this video ?

  • @tomharrell1954
    @tomharrell1954 4 года назад +38

    “Click the like button whether you like it or not” love your attitude Aussie your great!

  • @christiaansteenkamp5617
    @christiaansteenkamp5617 8 лет назад +14

    Hey me and my friend used your instructions and made a oil burner in this style and it works great! We built our aluminium furnace by stacking broken bricks in a circle inside a old oil barrel and filling the gaps in each layer with mud. Yes normal mud and letting it dry.
    Our pipe is only 1 meter long and we use a blow torch to ignite the oil then it burns great.
    I love your simple methodology no fuss. Thanks for your videos and Hello from South Africa

  • @jobvdboom5000
    @jobvdboom5000 4 года назад

    From all the oil burner desings i have tried, this is definitely the best, it's a very simple desing, it's adjustable and it's so easy to make. what i do have to say though is that the pipe or tube cannot have a taper or conical shape at the end.
    Thank you for sharing this simple desing, and showing us how it should be done!

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  4 года назад +2

      Thanks for the kind words. It does always amaze me with the complication, expense and equipment people use to do a simple job when there are so much cheaper, simpler and easier alternatives. It's like so many people seem to think unless they go to a lot of trouble and expense something cannot possibly work.

  • @rodneysrepurposingrecyclin3821
    @rodneysrepurposingrecyclin3821 9 лет назад

    I love your safety tips. I too am all for natural selection. Remove ALL warning labels.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад +2

      +Rodman Lyons When they have to put warning labels on Coffee cups. You know the stupid Disease is running out of control and something needs to be done. I bought a power tool the other day and the amount of safety notices in the thing was incredible. I had no intention of operating a power saw in a bathtub full of water and it never crossed my mind.... until I read the warning. The warnings must give the terminally stupid more Ideas than they were capable of coming up with on their own. ;0(

    • @rodneysrepurposingrecyclin3821
      @rodneysrepurposingrecyclin3821 9 лет назад +1

      Lmao. You sir are correct. My drill had the same warnings. Even a gigantic red tag on the cord. WARNING!!!! Use of this power tool in wet areas could result in electric shock or death. My first thought was my neighbor standing in the shower hanging his new toilet paper roll. While the shower is on.

    • @drizler
      @drizler 8 лет назад

      +Oil Burner ........................................and then you open the manual and it reads like War and Peace . Worse yet it tells you almost nothing you need to know yet the one part you can understand via the translator is all the safety bullshit like "don't stick your finger on the running blade" , UGhhhhh. If you do find something you want to know be extra careful doing it if it doesn't make sense. I just got a 30K tractor and the manual said to break it in you had to run it FULL POWER all the time for the first 50 hours. Yea I crap you not, Massey Ferguson made in Korea. Duhhhhh.

  • @ushillbillies
    @ushillbillies 5 лет назад +1

    Well I have built several variations ,but yours is by far the easiest , Cheers ,from Alberta Canada

  • @roberto.cavanagh5022
    @roberto.cavanagh5022 9 лет назад

    Missed you. Got a farm soy exrusion plant running on your ideas (dryer, virgin oil degummer, pre extrusión heater, etc). Thank you again. Now working on your WI system on our tractors running 50% veggie oil.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад +1

      +Roberto .Cavanagh That sounds awesome. It's great when people can put these ideas into practical applications that do work and save them money or time. I would really love to see some Vids of what you are doing.
      ATM I have the IP on my truck turned up so it's really giving me some power. I have upped the WI as well and the engine is showing every sign it's getting cleaned out more and more and keeps running better. WI is a very simple and beneficial thing for diesel engines especially those on veg. If you could do some vids and let me know that would be awesome.

  • @tomayrscotland6890
    @tomayrscotland6890 3 года назад

    Excellent Tutorial Video and also about the cheapest burner I have seen so far. I wish I had watched you Tube years ago, All the info I have collected for people like yourself has served me well. Thanx. Tom Ayr Scotland.

  • @janicetrohn
    @janicetrohn 9 лет назад +2

    I love your enthusiasm! I'll put my hubby right on building one of these since he always has jugs of waste oil sitting around!

  • @ericaikens5339
    @ericaikens5339 3 года назад

    I appreciate your straight and forward Miss on something and keeping it simple a lot of people make things complicated you have shown with simpleness Effectiveness can be achieved great video

  • @builtrodewreckedit
    @builtrodewreckedit 9 лет назад +1

    That's really got a nice spray pattern i wasn't quite expecting that. I think not relying on venturi to suck up the oil makes this much simpler than some spray burners. Looks very nice.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад +3

      +builtrodewreckedit From what I have seen and read, I agree in that the oil being pressurised makes things easier. It seems a lot of people using the siphon nozzles in furnaces have to pressurise the fuel to get the flow and heat requirement they want out of them. They then need to add a blower as well to get the air needed for combustion.
      The spray pattern is very fine and mist like even on veg oil. It is almost surprising given the " nozzle" it just some copper tube squeezed down in a vice.

  • @mcjdubpower
    @mcjdubpower Год назад

    I'm back in 23, and this is better than ever.

  • @elijahtiner5691
    @elijahtiner5691 6 лет назад

    Glad I finally found this channel. I've recently moved my shop to a bigger building and the temps are close to 0° here in northern Arkansas. Watched many videos but yours are the best and easier to understand

  • @gus23a
    @gus23a 8 лет назад +3

    For better results, try to move the nozzle a little bit inside the tube. This creates a much stronger draft and helps to stabilize the flame.

  • @slrs3908
    @slrs3908 5 лет назад

    I like that if the power to your compressor goes out, the pressure and fuel and flame will to. Convenient and safe.

  • @skunkpower9081
    @skunkpower9081 4 года назад +15

    Buzz bombs yeah. *chuckles* My first thought when that fired up was, that's a simple pulse jet engine.

  • @306champion
    @306champion 7 лет назад

    Well Mate you stole my thunder near the end, I was going to remark (and I probably still am but who gives a toss) that if this was audio only I would swear it was a Buzz Bomb over London. Don't stop what you're doing Mate, It's brilliant.

  • @moking1761
    @moking1761 8 лет назад +1

    Hi Oil Burner,
    I like the very simple principle the burner works on, especially the ultra clean burn. The only problem I see when used as a heater in the workshop is the carbon dioxide / Carbon Monoxide, both of which are the products of burning oil. These are heavier than air and can cause suffercation without any ventilation. An exhaust pipe would be required - to overcome the problem - and would need to be quite long to extract all the heat output via the walls of the exhaust pipe. Still a great idea and I will check just how much of the usable heat actually goes up the chimney so to speak. As a pensioner I need it to be ultra efficient as I like to get away from all the rubbish on TV during the winter months and do a bit of metal bashing in a warm workshop. Keep up the experiments and the inovation, It blows the mind ...literally. I must try an extra long exhaust pipe, at a guess I would think about 25-30 feet and see if the natural draft of that long a pipe would still give an efficient burn without having to use a compressor. Not sure of the oil flow rate as the air pressure into the tank would have to come from a point inside the exhaust pipe( venturi effect). It's worth thinking about.
    Regards to you and yours
    MoK

  • @indet1957
    @indet1957 6 лет назад +6

    Love your work! I've built my foundry around your oil burner design. I use waste oil from autos. It's freaking awesome and hot as h-ll. I do use a bounce house blower instead of my compressor.

  • @tomaskeller4200
    @tomaskeller4200 8 лет назад

    Very clean burn, and very environmental friendly because it uses vegetable oil.

  • @daveyr5462
    @daveyr5462 3 года назад

    As my company's elfen saftey rep if you know your machines they won't turn nasty all of a sudden. You'll know them inside out and they won't rip your insides out as I always say. Treat them with respect and know exactly what they do and you won't go wrong.

  • @rolandvz71able
    @rolandvz71able 3 года назад +1

    Love this guys "SAFETY TIPS!"

  • @kbbacon
    @kbbacon 9 лет назад +9

    I have used a paint spray gun and it works just like that. You made a huge paint spray gun! Good job!

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад

      +kbbacon I was looking at how the thing coated the fence with the spray demonstration and way thinking it would be really good to spray trailers and things with oil to stop them rusting. Probably also good for spraying plants with insecticide etc. If the Nozzle wasn't flattened it would be like the spray wand on a hose!
      Did your spray gun work for a burner? I tried it a few times over the years but could never get the guns to spray enough fuel.

    • @kbbacon
      @kbbacon 9 лет назад +3

      It worked! I'll do a video. There is a trick, if I can get my stuff together.

    • @kbbacon
      @kbbacon 8 лет назад

      neosomato hypergenesis It depends upon your air/fuel output. Can be small (10k btu) or as big as you can handle.

  • @Tadek5
    @Tadek5 6 лет назад

    just excelent idea. Good for every fuel. I do not need so long flame so I will bend a pipe around , weld it to close the end and drill a 10-20 or so holes at the top. That way I have a circular burner. I will test how it works.this week, reg Jack

  • @bengibson3955
    @bengibson3955 4 года назад

    Great work-nice and simple. Not sure how I’m going to convince the missus that we need one of these in the lounge room, not that poofy slow combustion wood heater. This looks like like much more fun.

  • @nickrandol9133
    @nickrandol9133 4 года назад +7

    It sounds like a pissed off bumble bee. Love it.

  • @vicmorrowshead3760
    @vicmorrowshead3760 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for the info. This is the best demonstration of the concept. Simple air fuel vaporized with ignition .in a chamber with exhaust flow.- and Adjustable .

  • @SteveP-vm1uc
    @SteveP-vm1uc 9 лет назад

    Welcome Back, OB!!!! I was getting worried about you.. Glad to see you were just screwing around in another direction..
    Sounds like the compressor was running the entire time. I'm sure many will find a use for this, but I still like the old burners you have developed.. I think much less electrical power being used with the old.. Still lots of fun!!! Glad you posted up, buddy!! ;)

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад +2

      +Steve 1961P. Hi Steve, yeah, Things have been rough and I wasn't at all sure I'd do any more vids. Still not sure of how motivated I can stay but I'll see.
      I am still convinced the drip burners are easier, more practical and efficient than any spray or siphon design. The compressor was running the whole time and getting hot in the process. Some people seem dedicated to the Commercial spray burner nozzles which are a lot more expensive and complicated than this one and I'm buggered if I can see any advantage to them. Perhaps those that are dedicated to the spray burner design will find this a simpler and far cheaper way to go. Some people seem to thrive on over complication, expense and difficulty of operation.
      For me, the blown fuel/ drip type burners are a far more practical and versatile bit of gear but each to their own.

  • @00_negative
    @00_negative 6 лет назад

    You built a simple version of a carburetor.......f@$!ing brillant! Reminds me of small engine class 25 yrs ago. We built something similar out of coke bottles and drinking straws. Love the vids i laugh my ass off everytime i watch. Hope the neighbors are well. Live free

  • @arjanwilbie2511
    @arjanwilbie2511 9 лет назад +7

    good to see you alive and well. safety tip of the day... do not eat beans and use the farts as pressured air. it will go in melt down.

    • @antonhelsgaun
      @antonhelsgaun 8 лет назад

      and you'll be single in no time

    • @arjanwilbie2511
      @arjanwilbie2511 8 лет назад +1

      My wife does not grant me a devorce. I see it as a challenge.

    • @bobbofly
      @bobbofly 8 лет назад

      If she won't, just build a 3kw oil burner to get rid of the body - "forge your own freedom"!

    • @iainmel1
      @iainmel1 7 лет назад

      hahahaha

  • @davidhoover8877
    @davidhoover8877 8 лет назад +1

    You come up with so cool oil burners. I think I will try this one. Thanks for posting!

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад +1

      +David Hoover Thank you for the kind words.

  • @MittyNuke1
    @MittyNuke1 3 года назад

    My first thought is... you've basically built a pressure pot style spray painter, with your burner nozzle instead of a paint sprayer gun. Other than it being a little too small, I could literally use a cheap paint sprayer I recently purchased at harbor freight instead of building the tank, and make a nozzle the way you did for the actual burner nozzle. Love the simplicity, looks awesome!

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  3 года назад

      Using a spray gun is not near as simple as you think. Try it, I did and was very disappointed. The air/ Fuel ration is way off and you have to really butcher the gun to get it to work at all and then it's till not good. Plus yyou have a fuel takn that's way too small for any practical Purpose.
      Personally I don't like spray Burners at all and prefer the forced air style that you can get virtually infinite heat out of and dont need to run a noisy compressor,

    • @MittyNuke1
      @MittyNuke1 3 года назад

      @@glumpy10 That is a good point, thank you for the advice. Plus I eventually may want to use that sprayer to actually paint anyway. 😅 I'm thinking I need to learn how to weld so I can build a LPG tank gravity fed burner like you have (among a million other reasons). Your videos are awesome -- since watching your videos I have started trying to find a cheap bouncy house blower because I have a growing scrap metal + regular junk pile and love the idea of processing it myself to get top value/not pay to haul it to the dump. I am moving in a couple weeks and will finally have space to do stuff like this without the neighbors complaining. I like the idea of atomizing the oil spray for a more controlled burn but agree that compressed air is a big waste of electricity for something that can be done cheaper and easier with the gravity burner. Plus once it's heated up, the heat itself should vaporize the oil anyway. Your videos on the waste oil processing were very helpful as well, so thank you again and hope all is well down under 👍👍

  • @user-pg4nn2gs2k
    @user-pg4nn2gs2k 8 лет назад +4

    I love it mate! you are a legend!! I have lots of waste engine oil a old 45 gallon drum and loads of scrap metal. keep em coming you ripper!!

  • @yiannikouzeleas4191
    @yiannikouzeleas4191 6 лет назад

    Excellent way to describe a very efficient and economic solution for saving money in heating bills ! well done and keep the good work ongoing ... all the best mate and thank you the information !

  • @mre2495
    @mre2495 8 лет назад +5

    You are brilliant. I've duplicated several of your experiments part for part with identical results. Im an automotive technician with my own shop and alot of used oil. Ive thought about making a large version of this type but then I thought how small can this burner be made and still function? That is my current project. Love your videos!

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад +1

      +MR E Wow, thank you for the overly generous but much appreciated comments. it's good to hear when other people do things and they work out because I get some that don't seem to follow what I did and they have trouble. The principal will work in any size. you just have to keep it all proportional but there is a wide lattitude of what you can do anyway.
      Let me know how you go with your smaller burner.

    • @antonhelsgaun
      @antonhelsgaun 8 лет назад

      multiple particles need to be able to fit thrugh!

  • @erikstrandberg4606
    @erikstrandberg4606 8 лет назад

    Thanks for the idéa, I have test it but with my own idea. I used copper pipe to create a spraygun so it create a vacuum that sucks the fuel in to the burner and it works just great. But oil burns not clean untill the burner is hot and diesel burns much cleaner. Thanks Oil burner

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад

      +Erik Strandberg Be interesting to see what you have come up with if you could do a vid. Sounds like a great system!

    • @erikstrandberg4606
      @erikstrandberg4606 8 лет назад

      +Oil Burner I can send you a video on the burner on Google+

  • @zivojinbudimirovic1061
    @zivojinbudimirovic1061 8 лет назад

    You are a genius,so simple to build from scrap yet so functional.I want to build something like this for heating my house,old engine oil will be used as fuel.
    I have central heating system with wather circulating trough cast iron radiators.Only one question can combustion
    chamber be shorter and wider I need it to fit in central heating wood/coal furnace.Thanks for great ideas You are only one who explained every detail about building, keep up the good work.
    Almost forgot any ideas about automated ignition of the burner(glowplug from diesel engine etc.)

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад +1

      +Zivojin Budimirovic Try it in the combustion chamber you have. You might need to put something in the flame path like a short metal tube to at as a " Glow plug" so there is a hot point to light the heavier oil.
      I haven't done anything with auto ignition but the best thought I have come up with so far is a small gas pilot light. Even a BBQ gas bottle should last weeks with a small flame.
      Thanks for the kind words, much appreciated. Nice to get a compliment instead of idiots whining about safety and the environment for a change.

  • @georgewherry691
    @georgewherry691 7 лет назад +9

    I am impressed with the beauty of simplicity of your designs. Less is usually better I have learned over time. I just subscribed because of this. Happy new year to you and yours.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  7 лет назад +1

      Thank You George, same to you and your family.
      I like simplicity. I think it's the hall mark of good design. I have seen many people go to a lot of expense and complication with these spray type burners and still have endless trouble. I would expect that on something made from junk but the fact is, I have never had any problem yet with this or other designs.

  • @Kevinegan1
    @Kevinegan1 4 года назад +4

    I'm wondering if a continous arcing spark plug would ignite used motor oil and air mixture or just foul it out. I guess I'll find out. I have a woodburning stove made from a 55 gallon drum but I've grown too old and crippled to cut firewood. I'm thinking that this would work great in the barrel. I've got lots of old motor oil that is clean of any trash and debris, aside from the carbon and metalic particulates in used motor oil. I picked up about (60) 2gallon containers of used motor oil about three years ago. At the time I had no idea what I needed all that used oil for, I just knew I needed it. Thank you, you answered the question of why I needed the old oil and more impotantly solved my issue of heating my shop.
    By the way, if you have to tell someone not to look down the end that the flame exhausts from, you wasted your breath. They may heed your advise not to place their eye over a pipe belching fire like a military flamethrower but they'll find another way to either get hurt or burn down their home. It's called Natural Selection and the fact that there are so many blithering idiots surviving until adulthood these days is a direct consequence of mankind circumventing Natural Selection.

    • @vanderumd11
      @vanderumd11 4 года назад

      Definitely not good ... Think about your lungs and your families lungs. Plastic seal the windows, then use cheap throw blankets, and doors of the house. Use 3 small space heaters placed near cold spots on a thermostat. It will cost maybe $130 a month extra for heating the entire house

  • @andrewdavies4604
    @andrewdavies4604 5 лет назад

    I used to meddle with burning oils year ago. Must revisit it.

  • @robertp6391
    @robertp6391 Год назад

    Primitive-Effective-and Brutal...!Perfect!

  • @dmithsmith5880
    @dmithsmith5880 4 года назад

    That's cool 👍 you should try a variant of this but instead of pressurizing the fuel oil itself, simply introduce it into the stream of air via a venturi, just a sharp angle "Y" tube tapped into the air line just before the orifice, the air moving through the "Y" will automatically draw the fuel into the air.
    The fire can stay continuously running and the tank will not need depressurization upon refuelling, will use less air and fuel and improve overall adjustability and efficiency. 👍

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  4 года назад

      That is pretty much how all the rest of my many forced air Burners work. The fuel won't be drawn in and it won't atomise but it doesn't have to. The fuel is fed in by gravity or much better still , pumped or pressurised and the hot burner chamber phase changes the oil from a liquid to a gas so it can Burn. Have a look at all my other vids to see how it works and the huge amount of power you can get out the things.

  • @jimmybritt9537
    @jimmybritt9537 4 года назад +12

    The minute that burner lite I thought of ww two buzz bombs , weird how it sounds so similar

  • @backyardmetalcasting
    @backyardmetalcasting 8 лет назад

    I love the simple design and the huge orange flames!!

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад

      +David D Whats not to be loved about that! :0)

  • @alexzander1839
    @alexzander1839 7 лет назад

    5:40 I did click the like button even and there is nothing to unlike about this fantastic project. Keep up the good work.

  • @mrussell9099
    @mrussell9099 5 лет назад +1

    Hey i built one of your oil burner's and it works great

  • @battalion151R
    @battalion151R 9 лет назад

    Wow! Thanks David! Might have to rework that heater from last year. This looks much better, as to control. Hope you are having a great spring. Al

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад

      +Al Henning Hi Al, Stick with the one you have mate. For what you use it for it's much better. If you are having control issues let me know and I'll see if we can figure something out.

  • @MaruAdventurer
    @MaruAdventurer 9 лет назад +6

    Welcome back. Been missing my safety tips.
    Me, I would weld some metal mesh to that baby so I can melt metal and cook dinner at the same time.

    • @rixogtr
      @rixogtr 3 года назад

      Chicken tighs grilled with burning oil mist, 7 out of 2 doctors recommend :D

  • @andrewrussell7379
    @andrewrussell7379 8 лет назад

    I did comment the ww2 thing before you said it so I deleted it but what a demonstration....Cheers mate.

  • @dtempleton22936
    @dtempleton22936 5 лет назад

    wow, this will be a great burner for a small pottery kiln.

  • @AlphaChimpEnergy
    @AlphaChimpEnergy 8 лет назад +2

    I bet if it has a few bends in the pipe you'd get a more intense gasification, but it looks great, add big heat plate or box to that end it would give more heating surface area. It looks cool too.

    • @cumminsfan6
      @cumminsfan6 4 года назад

      By pipe do you mean the square tube or the nozzle?

  • @yyahaliyyahali
    @yyahaliyyahali 9 лет назад +1

    Thanks for uploading an useful topic to the world of you tubers. God bless you 😉👍🏻

  • @TheMissingnut
    @TheMissingnut 7 лет назад

    i have been experimenting with waste oil burners and for what its worth I have found that 8 to 15 psi gives best results depending on how fine a nozzle you create. Also the air supply from a compressor which is constant is best. To ignite the oil it must be pre heated to 80 degrees c or 175 F and it will then ignite with a standard burner ignitor.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  7 лет назад

      Are you using a commercial nozzle or a DIY one like this?
      I find any preheating of the oil is useless because the millisecond it is atomised, it looses all it's heat to the air.

  • @antonywardle
    @antonywardle 9 лет назад +2

    great stuff. good to see you back, makes me want to finish my one. Still trying to put a second hole in my gas bottle!

  • @airgunbubba2505
    @airgunbubba2505 4 года назад

    I have never seen anything like this before! thanks for the share and i do think you are correct about the sound is very close to that of an old aviation radial engine.

  • @bmoraski
    @bmoraski 8 лет назад

    I love Fish and Chips. Im really enjoying your video's.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад +1

      +bmoraski I think I'll have to do a fish and chips cook up video. Maybe Donuts too!

    • @bmoraski
      @bmoraski 8 лет назад

      Hell yeah !

  • @xeroinfinity
    @xeroinfinity 3 года назад

    pressurizing to atomize the fuel burns hotter and cleaner than those drip feed systems. Many years ago I built a small furnace for my huge shop. I mainly burnt oil and coolant mixed and a 55 gal drum would last 4-5 months on 16 hr days.

  • @stevenacarter77
    @stevenacarter77 6 лет назад

    OUTSTANDING BURNER

  • @luckygen1001
    @luckygen1001 9 лет назад +10

    I like it! I need a person like you in my backyard!

    • @diecksl
      @diecksl 6 лет назад +2

      And I need a backyard like that (my wife would kill me of course, but hey...)

  • @EngelWulf
    @EngelWulf 5 лет назад

    Very simple build im sure with the right size setup it can heat up a steam boiler to run a good size engine

  • @joandar1
    @joandar1 7 лет назад +1

    Cheers Mate from John. I now have what I need to know to build my own furnace.

  • @teckiepete
    @teckiepete 9 лет назад +2

    Love the health a safety tip!
    Im going to try this as seems the easiest version yet!

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад +1

      +Pete Franklin One thing I have noticed, as well as being the simplest spray design I can find, it also seems to be one of the few if any that will light straight off on WVO. All the others I have seen are either using LPG for startup or are using diesel/ kero as the fuel.

  • @peterharvey3451
    @peterharvey3451 5 лет назад +3

    Sounds like what I would imagine a old WW2 V1 rocket would sound like

  • @zaappp1588
    @zaappp1588 8 лет назад

    I clicked the like button as I was told.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад

      +Zaappp !!! Thank You! Much appreciated.

  • @Fairlanecustom300
    @Fairlanecustom300 9 лет назад

    I'm gunna have a go at making one of these. I have 2 furnaces with the kwiky oil burner by David D that both work well, but yours is simpler again and doesn't require any machining. I might experiment a little and see if some form of nozzle works on the end. Will let you know how it goes. Thanks for the design though.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад

      +Fairlanecustom300 I have looked at that design and a few others and am always floored by the complication in them. I looked at one the other day and I swear it must have 25 brass fittings on the thing and 3 valves and all sorts of other complexity and expense. At the end of the day, all they have to do is make fire so the simpler and cheaper that can be done, the better it is I say.

  • @salehanzi8357
    @salehanzi8357 7 лет назад

    Dear this is great.. can I add one thing: if you make the out let pipe longer and twest it . so the end burner nosel will be before the twesting pipe . this will give you small partcle if oil that it will burn faster. Thans

  • @paulhickson1996
    @paulhickson1996 4 года назад

    work in garage. good idea for using mixed fuel. dieael/petrol mix.sometimes customers put wrong fuel. Now have use for it.

  • @barryellis6663
    @barryellis6663 5 лет назад +2

    I love it how much more easy can you get. Love your videos keep them coming. Have a happy new year

  • @ThePuuc2
    @ThePuuc2 3 года назад

    the sound look like pulse jet. I love it.

  • @ffslave
    @ffslave 9 лет назад +8

    I'm glad you're back I was afraid the safetycrats had gotten you.

  • @tombrenes2779
    @tombrenes2779 4 года назад +1

    You should offer your services and show up to the hoarders program on TV

  • @mr.crapper7197
    @mr.crapper7197 4 года назад +1

    That's a good job of tinkering !

  • @919dds
    @919dds Год назад

    Great teacher. Thanks for the show.

  • @bobbrawley9439
    @bobbrawley9439 7 лет назад +2

    I clicked the like button wether I liked it or not

    • @bobbrawley9439
      @bobbrawley9439 7 лет назад

      Wow! that is a rocket pipe. A rocket pipe? Yea a rocket square pipe

  • @dedenjama7173
    @dedenjama7173 4 года назад

    Lovely work. Thanks for sharing.

  • @oldoldpilgrim7898
    @oldoldpilgrim7898 4 года назад

    I don't know why someone with a down under acent would use mostly imperial measuer but, I sure do like it.

  • @locouk
    @locouk 9 лет назад

    Nice, a simple carburettor.. Now dig up your ol lady's 15 foot washing line pole for a longer exhaust tube. 👍🏼

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад +1

      +Green Silver I have some tube like that I could use actually!

  • @billyjones9045
    @billyjones9045 3 года назад

    Yea!!!!...havent seen your videos in a long time...your my favorite pyro

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  3 года назад

      Thanks Mate! I hope to get back to it one day.

  • @hfraat25
    @hfraat25 Год назад

    Simple things are best. Thanks 😊

  • @eltoncarneirogimenez6299
    @eltoncarneirogimenez6299 7 лет назад

    very nice, simple to do congrats

  • @joohop
    @joohop 9 лет назад +26

    Looks + sounds like a pulse jet

    • @emutiny
      @emutiny 8 лет назад +3

      +joohop it is a pulse jet

    • @CCWSig
      @CCWSig 8 лет назад +4

      +emutiny I don't believe it falls into that category. These work more on the venturi principal.

    • @stg45
      @stg45 8 лет назад +3

      +joohop
      yes, the same soud of a V.1 Vergeltungswaffe

    • @iainmel1
      @iainmel1 7 лет назад +1

      If resonation is a problem, have the burner tube inside another tube with THICK wadding (rockwool?) in between.

    • @marecanine
      @marecanine 5 лет назад

      I thought the pulse jets had a valve ?

  • @billhopen
    @billhopen 6 лет назад +4

    Great low tech simplicity, but great engineering!...I didn't know they had Hill-Billies in England or Australia,( wherever your accent is from)... I wonder if I could melt bronze in my furnace with this blower spray contraption, LP is pretty expensive. Thanks for sharing "Mate"

    • @barryellis6663
      @barryellis6663 5 лет назад

      I don't see why not
      Hell give it a try

    • @mrgreenswelding2853
      @mrgreenswelding2853 5 лет назад +1

      Sounds like aussie ascent to me. We're all hill billies down here.

  • @_milo590
    @_milo590 9 лет назад

    Just in case, I personally would use a one way check valve. just in case the fire gets back up in the jet. I love the project though, and may end up building one.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  9 лет назад +2

      +_Husky Can't light the oil, it is not flammable as a liquid, only a gas.

    • @mrtechnophile3483
      @mrtechnophile3483 8 лет назад

      Oil only burns when mixed with an oxidizer (the oxygen in the air in this case). If you have a cup of oil and light it: only the surface and vaporized oil can burn, no air below the surface. Also it only burns so fast. If the fire somehow gets up in the nozzle, it'll just be blown back out. If it got to the oil feed tube, no air in there.

  • @petertomas3665
    @petertomas3665 4 года назад

    I think it doesnt get enough air into the metal pipe. Maybe if you drill a few holes parallel with pipe helps to reduce the amount of oil and maybe have even more flame and heat produced.It just looks too little the amount of air it gets in comparison with oil. If you see how a oil burner works for home heating it has usually 0.75 jet while an electric blower pressing huge amounts of air.

  • @DrPhilSays
    @DrPhilSays 5 лет назад

    Nice.. how about a double 45 degree bend to a vertical chimney and you can avoid all the back flames and get a good suction effect from the vertical segment too

  • @lisajohnson8566
    @lisajohnson8566 8 лет назад

    Nice idea and very simple. Thank you.

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад

      +Lisa Johnson Thank you.

  • @festus51
    @festus51 8 лет назад

    I just subscribed to your channel, I love your safety tips they are all so true !!!!!

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  8 лет назад

      +festus51 Every day though I see real things that are so obvious but people still muck up it actually makes these safety tip valid for some idiots.

  • @inspectyerbooty
    @inspectyerbooty 8 лет назад

    yup, sounds close to the old V-1 rockets without having the vanes and venturi [and subsequently the thrust ] ;-) ... nice burner

  • @craignehring
    @craignehring 9 лет назад +2

    Now that is using ones head for more than a hat rack... bravo

  • @thisissoeasy
    @thisissoeasy 5 лет назад

    Absolutely brilliant! Cheers from Broken Hill...

  • @oxtruck8054
    @oxtruck8054 3 года назад

    That's really neat! I'm already thinking on how I want to build one

  • @lbb9262
    @lbb9262 3 года назад

    If you used a round tube you could put a piece of plate on the front like a torpedo heater , you could probably cut the air / fuel mix down and get better results.

  • @TheEmptynester
    @TheEmptynester 7 лет назад

    You forgot to toast me a marshmallow. Yum, LOL. That was a great burner. You are so creative. Merry Christmas my friend .E :)

    • @glumpy10
      @glumpy10  7 лет назад +1

      Thanks Empty.
      Merry Christmas to you and may the new year bring you all the happiness you deserve and more.

  • @robstirling3173
    @robstirling3173 6 лет назад

    Sounds just like a V1!