@@5roundsrapid263 They have "reality shows" which are just filthy people that curse for pay! I used to watch TLC and Discovery to LEARN interesting things, but now I watch my old James Burke DVDs now. And Rob's stuff....
@@LittlePetieWheat I use to like watching "How it's Made" and "Dirty Jobs." Magazines are just as bad now; Popular electronics/Mechanics used to have interesting or useful things you could build, but now they are just full of ads for junk. I'd rather watch Do-It-Yourself videos than look at a magazine.
With this crazy weather we got this year, I appreciate you telling everyone how to keep warm, recharge batteries and just generally be safe. Thank you!
This is just great for indoor usage without the smell of hydrocarbons. Great information for us to know Robert. Look forward to try this myself. No smell when is use is just GREAT.
Hey Rob that is a great little kit for sure . A good video would be to test a carbon monoxide alarm with one or maybe there is a carbon monoxide meter with a numerical display that can show different fuels you test in the burners . Would be super interesting ! 👍🏻
You are absolutely awesome! I watch your videos all the time, we are kindred spirits no doubt! Thank you for all the videos, this is definitely my favorite channel🥳❤️
If you're so worried about health and safety that you freeze yourself to death because you're afraid to have a fire, then you have carried things MUCH too far.
Every year people die during winter power outages from carbon monoxide poisoning, because they either don't know the danger or they ignore it. Heating indoors with any fuel requires forethought and care, especially in newer homes which are far better sealed than anything built before 1980.
@@kmoecub In the 80's was when we first started playing with "Super Insulated Homes." Some were sealed so tightly you had to crack a window so the fire could draft in the fireplace. We had a LOT to learn.
Finally you have bought the Chinese parrafin stoveit has saved my life this winter. I have now escaped to the Philippines. Continue playing witht the parrafin stove they have amillion uses. I want to test heating sand to keep my tent warm overnight.
This is the one I've been waiting for! Question: is it possible that the kerosene is being vaporised and burned and the veg oil is being left behind, this would render it a standard kerosene burner. The reason why I suspect this is because that flame is too clean! Keep up the great work Robert.
actually have this.... the little stove leaks fuel like a siv if you tip it a little, because the fuel can underneath isn't sealed to the rest of the housing. Just held on by spot welds.
Just picked up one of these stoves really cheap, just waiting for the shops to open again to pick up some lamp oil just to start with, really looking forward to having a nice warm workshop.
My Gran had a parrafin heater in her bathroom back in the 60's and the thing stank to high heaven when it was lit. You also need ventilation with these so it tends to cancel the heat out.
Super fun video! I'm a total gear junky, so this sorta thing is right up my alley! I seen a cool video on how to make a legit mini wood stove out of 4 dog bowls which I thought is very impressive.
I after watching your video on a sand battery I bought some fire bricks and built a 4 foot (1.2 meters) monstrosity in my offgrid home around a 9000 btu propane Little Buddy heater. It works great.
Is the stove output adjustable? It would be interesting to see a bean can heater portion with a sand battery built in. The metal part would create quick heat, and the sand battery would release heat overnight when you snuff the stove before bed 😀. This heater running a Stirling, charging a power station would be an awesome diy Combined Heat Power system 👍👍.
I just flicked back to see how you made the biodiesel and it is really tempting to have a go even though I don't need to. Here is a challenge if you haven't already done it. When I was a kid we had gravity fed paraffin pot heaters that vented to the chimney. I wonder if people still have them? Could you build one on the cheap that ran off your biodiesel? My motivation is thinking about condensation. A quick Google and I get 1l water for every 1l of biodiesel = 1l water in the air for 9 kwh. Over the course of several days with a couple of people breathing as well it is going to get damp unless you have some decent ventilation and if you increase the ventilation too much you are going to blow away a lot of the warmth you've built up.
From a couple videos I've seen (by "tea experts" a cup of tea takes about an hour, several pots, several tea cups, and a trip to a very expensive tea shoppe!
The first one we made those for camping. Just used an old metal coffee can punched holes in the side, left the top untouched and set it on the propane stove.
The outdoor BS 150? Well we all know what BS stands for at 12 pounds. But this video is an awesome example of two different things coming together and making something completely usable. Reminds me of what happened when the first comma correcting lens were combined at the lens grinders workshop. The design was sent to completely different vendors for processing, just happened to be they used the same lens maker. So buy both items, repackage them, upcharge and sell as value added. Love it. Cheers.
One of the best tips I got was that you can use a PV panel as a radiant heater just as well as you can use it for generating power. So one outside the home connected direct with a cable to one inside the home is a complete renewable energy heating solution!
In a very small space they tend to produce too much heat so my solution is to remove every other wick or more. Regarding fumes you could just add on a DOWNFLOW chimney ie it is cooling the exhaust and exiting it at a low point,
I am seriously considering getting one of these setups since out last bout with power outage, the power outage was not so long (plus we had a generator) but the power surge before we lost power killed the igniter on the furnace. This wouldn't have been bad had it not been -10F (-23C) before the windchill, this made the inside temp at its lowest 5F (-15C) due to not having kerosene to use our big kerosene heater halfway through the night. Fortunately we were able to get a heating and cooling company to come out on Christmas Eve and put in a new igniter and test the furnace for any other issues, and yes there is now enough kerosene for a few days if need be on hand now.
Hi Robert it's so good to see your still doing the videos. I really enjoy your content alot. If there is any tracks on my channel that you may wish to use for intros etc just use them you have my full permission. Happy christmas my friend
I have one of those cozy heaters although I think it has a different name and its a bit shorter.. right now I have 3 single wick alcohol lamps with utensil holders over them, there are several layers of wire mesh inside the utensil holders and I have a couple of sizes of cans with top and bottom removed on top of the perforated holder, the cans are around 140°f ambient is 50° and the room is 73°... not bad for around $8 including fuel! Ive looked at the chinese multi wick burner before but havent gotten one... you can add cans to the top of that or plant pots to help with radiating the heat
Would it be possible for you to give us some company info on the products you purchased? searching Amazon is not giving me matching results by the name of the product though it might have a different name here in the United States or not be available
The one where your hand shadow hits the thermometer it risses in exelerated stade🙏🎁🙏 Somhow youtube don't relay us when I do your name and panabol phocused heating point A mabey grapite panabol🙏 I look🙏
Nope I get hunny solution😂😂😂 Ah than I have to redo it for miself🙏 To show the aditional potentional towart readings diverentional and how shades can trigger lower aircohesional behavieures of Forrests as wgnitor to forrestfires🙏
Great video. Thanks. There here are dozens of types of stoves and "heaters" to go on-top on Amazon but with a bit of effort (still easier than building one myself lol!!) I found both items on Amazon (in the US) for ~ $20 USD/ea
Aladdin lamps have these long glass chimneys and burn very hot, but it's almost impossible to get their mantles anymore. If one fitted a metal chimney instead, I imagine it would make a good heater.
Hi. Parts for Aladdin lamps are readily available from Lehman's, and other online sources. If it's the mantle you're missing, though, you can easily convert your lamp to an excellent Argand lamp by simply raising the flame spreader in the burner about 1 cm. It will cleanly burn bright yellow, and give off tons of heat. I've been burning mine that way for years now, and much prefer the warm light it produces to the harsh white of the mantle.
@@Karl63601 That's very educational, thank you. It is just the mantle I'm missing. I've made a little holder that would hold a regular mantle, but haven't tried it yet. I was suggesting the metal chimney, because it would probably be better for radiating the heat than the glass chimney. How do you raise the flame spreader?
Okay. I'm assuming that you have a number 23 or23a lamp. You'll find that number on the wick adjuster. Lift off the gallery and chimney. Remove the mantle frame. Lower the wick. Now would be a good time to give the wick a good trim.The flame spreader is the thing in the middle of the burner that the wick surrounds. It looks like a thimble filled with holes. It is normally bottomed into the burner against an internal stop. Grip it with your fingertips (no tools needed) and twist and raise it about 1 cm. Toss the mantle frame into the bin, and replace the gallery and chimney. Job done. I've been working with these lamps since 1969, and love them with a passion.
@@Karl63601 Thanks for the advice. So I just raise it by fingers? That sounds easy enough. Yes, I have a 23. I did a good amount of research on their anatomy and was so amazed when I first got that blue flame. I've had some partial success with fitting a regular mantle on a custom frame. I would think such a frame would be very popular.
Glad you're finding the info useful. By the way, if you'd like to see this mod demonstrated, there's a fellow named Jeff Hall who lives on a boat and uses his lamp for heat and light. Go to his RUclips channel and take a look. Happy New Year!
ha ha, cheers for these - the " "biodiesel" " reference should help those confused folk. These are all marketed as outdoor heaters, not that outdoorsis a great place to heat, but the liability diminishes to zero - re. those who will sadly KZ- ZB themselves - anyone with indoor combustion get a CO monitor..
I've had a couple of those "cozies" for a few years. I'm by no means a Safety Sally, but from my experience, the black paint on top isn't any good. After dozens and dozens of burns, they still get a sickly sweet smell to them when burned hot. Incidentally, if you have a UCO Candelier three candle lantern, it fits atop those nicely and warms a small area.
Robert yea the health and safty folks would get a self induced full frontal lobotomy if they seen my home made weed wacker/trimmer head made from butter knives LOL
Great job. I did this with a plant pot on top of the kerosene stove earlier this year when they £11.. That's 64% inflation btw... But if you remove the outer ring of the stove you get the radiant heat coming from the sides as well and a lovely red glow!! convection and radiation..
Hi Robert, I was doing some research on plant pot heaters fueled by tea candles. And apparently what makes them dangerous is the paraffin contained in the wax, as paraffinic fumes in high concentration can create an explosion. Vegetable oils like the ones you used also contain paraffinic components. Hence, do you think they pose similar dangers as tea light candles? Thanks.
I'm sure Rob will direct you to the "Playing With Fire" vid. The tldr is, don't do it if you aren't sure, any burner indoors (including a traditional gas boiler etc) has many risks including fumes, use enough ventilation and always have a carbon monoxide alarm. There are horrible incidents with all sorts of heaters at this time of year, electric blankets, gas explosions, CO poisoning, etc. Properly assess the risks and then mitigate them. Like use a hearth and chimney for this sort of thing.
I'm in the U.S. I found what looks to be the same stuff on Amazon. The heater is as low as $17.89. The burner is as low as $14.25. The burner says kerosene fuel.
A few notes on the stove: because they have a cotton wick you can burn ultra low sulfur diesel in them. These will bring a half gallon of water to a boil but not a gallon. The wicks are loaded folded so you get two diameters of wick in each hole. Do not pull the wick down to lower it. You're better off cutting it, for if you pull it down too far it's almost impossible to pull it back up and you've wasted a wick. Most kerosene/paraffin heaters smell mostly on startup and shutdown, but not much while running them. Running the stove without the rings would give you an 8-wick lantern, though you will have shadows from the frame. If you have trouble with your match lighting all 8 wicks at once, it will start if you light every other one.
The tiny filler cap had built in lighter - a tuft of cotton (better replaced with a tuft of rock wool!) on a thin steel bar. You light the tuft (it’s just come out of the fuel tank! 😁), and insert it down between the steel rings, to light the wicks. Works a treat, and you don’t burn your fingers trying to rebuilt the heater whilst it’s lit!
Great vis thanks. I have both they work great. Can you make the green one out of stainless household items and the forever wick that will burn used oil/bio diesel . Thanks Robert
Doesn't work worth a damn. I have the identical components in the video. You have to have a fan behind it. I use a usb powered computer fan connected to a solar charged battery pack for mine. It works quite well, more like what I think you imagine with the stove fan.
Just get a carbon monoxide detector, if you don't already have one. If the safety bugs you. Looks like you could easily make a couple of them from tin cans and buy two gallons of paraffin to make 10 gallons of biodiesel which at current prices would mean around £80 of fuel for about £30.
Hey M8, it's hot 🔥 downunda during your cold months. 🥶 Wanna do some stuff on how to keep it cool.... . Perhaps when you're cooking during one of those Summer Heatwaves you experience for a day or 3. 😃
Hi.. how long will a Litre burn for in one of them? Days, Hours ? Just to work out the cost of running it 24/7 in a small room on veggie oil perhaps thined on a little ethanol
Hi Robert, I wonder if you have an opinion on the warning in the instructions: Maximum fire burning time: 6-7 hours, is there you reckon a genuine risk with using it for longer
I will now be able to eat as well as keep warm because of your teachings. I can not thank you enough.
This man and his team should be on the TV , just like the public information shorts that used to be on TV. 👍🐝🌞
Learning from TV is a lost cause now, unfortunately. Even TLC, originally “The Learning Channel”, is total nonsense now.
Yes, back when government was better at feigning concern and care for their citizens.
I used to love "How?" as child.
@@5roundsrapid263 They have "reality shows" which are just filthy people that curse for pay!
I used to watch TLC and Discovery to LEARN interesting things, but now I watch my old James Burke DVDs now.
And Rob's stuff....
@@LittlePetieWheat I use to like watching "How it's Made" and "Dirty Jobs."
Magazines are just as bad now; Popular electronics/Mechanics used to have interesting or useful things you could build, but now they are just full of ads for junk.
I'd rather watch Do-It-Yourself videos than look at a magazine.
"making biodiesel is about as complicated as making a cup of tea" always a treat!
With this crazy weather we got this year, I appreciate you telling everyone how to keep warm, recharge batteries and just generally be safe. Thank you!
This is just great for indoor usage without the smell of hydrocarbons. Great information for us to know Robert. Look forward to try this myself. No smell when is use is just GREAT.
The only channel i have seen that numbered the videos for easy reference. Great idea.
Making tea is easy.. keeping it in my mug after you had me drill holes in it a few weeks ago..is trickier..
Great work your doing, brilliant!
Thanks for a great and easy option Robert
great video, just ordered it as a backup, thankyou for sharing your knowledge.
Any yet another winner Thank you Robert.
Hey Rob that is a great little kit for sure . A good video would be to test a carbon monoxide alarm with one or maybe there is a carbon monoxide meter with a numerical display that can show different fuels you test in the burners . Would be super interesting ! 👍🏻
Thanks for your time and knowledge. Enjoy all your videos
You are absolutely awesome! I watch your videos all the time, we are kindred spirits no doubt! Thank you for all the videos, this is definitely my favorite channel🥳❤️
If you're so worried about health and safety that you freeze yourself to death because you're afraid to have a fire, then you have carried things MUCH too far.
Every year people die during winter power outages from carbon monoxide poisoning, because they either don't know the danger or they ignore it. Heating indoors with any fuel requires forethought and care, especially in newer homes which are far better sealed than anything built before 1980.
@@kmoecub In the 80's was when we first started playing with "Super Insulated Homes."
Some were sealed so tightly you had to crack a window so the fire could draft in the fireplace.
We had a LOT to learn.
With all these heaters you’ve got kicking around that building, if you lit them all together, you’d be able to grow bananas 😀
Climate change becomes than a huge issue :)
Rob could collect all the gas from the haters and heat the building!
@@colinkinvig7670 Made me laugh thanks
Thank you!
One of those thermoelectric stoves fans on top would be perfect, lets you know it still giving off heat too.
There has to be a way to build a Peltier junction with everyday stuff. Rob will find it one day.
Finally you have bought the Chinese parrafin stoveit has saved my life this winter. I have now escaped to the Philippines. Continue playing witht the parrafin stove they have amillion uses. I want to test heating sand to keep my tent warm overnight.
That seems like a nice alternative to a patio heater for those of us who don't like lugging big calor gas bottles around, lovely.
This is the one I've been waiting for!
Question: is it possible that the kerosene is being vaporised and burned and the veg oil is being left behind, this would render it a standard kerosene burner.
The reason why I suspect this is because that flame is too clean!
Keep up the great work Robert.
actually have this.... the little stove leaks fuel like a siv if you tip it a little, because the fuel can underneath isn't sealed to the rest of the housing. Just held on by spot welds.
Thank you Robert! Merry Christmas!
Just picked up one of these stoves really cheap, just waiting for the shops to open again to pick up some lamp oil just to start with, really looking forward to having a nice warm workshop.
My Gran had a parrafin heater in her bathroom back in the 60's and the thing stank to high heaven when it was lit. You also need ventilation with these so it tends to cancel the heat out.
Super fun video! I'm a total gear junky, so this sorta thing is right up my alley! I seen a cool video on how to make a legit mini wood stove out of 4 dog bowls which I thought is very impressive.
I after watching your video on a sand battery I bought some fire bricks and built a 4 foot (1.2 meters) monstrosity in my offgrid home around a 9000 btu propane Little Buddy heater. It works great.
Is the stove output adjustable? It would be interesting to see a bean can heater portion with a sand battery built in. The metal part would create quick heat, and the sand battery would release heat overnight when you snuff the stove before bed 😀. This heater running a Stirling, charging a power station would be an awesome diy Combined Heat Power system 👍👍.
I just flicked back to see how you made the biodiesel and it is really tempting to have a go even though I don't need to. Here is a challenge if you haven't already done it. When I was a kid we had gravity fed paraffin pot heaters that vented to the chimney. I wonder if people still have them? Could you build one on the cheap that ran off your biodiesel? My motivation is thinking about condensation. A quick Google and I get 1l water for every 1l of biodiesel = 1l water in the air for 9 kwh. Over the course of several days with a couple of people breathing as well it is going to get damp unless you have some decent ventilation and if you increase the ventilation too much you are going to blow away a lot of the warmth you've built up.
excellent... as always and thank you (p.s. I would have knocked that glass over at least four times in the time it took to assemble those things 😀)
..Hehe...I was thinkin the same thing, lol
Would be interesting to see your take on the Kelly Kettle Rob.
Would love to get your take on thermal acoustic heaters.
Reviews of the stainless part is the black paint burns off producing a bad smell. Would you recommend removing the paint prior to use?
From a couple videos I've seen (by "tea experts" a cup of tea takes about an hour, several pots, several tea cups, and a trip to a very expensive tea shoppe!
Please put link to both. Description different in USA
You can search for them on eBay. They're cheap.
for big cans for your can builds ask your restaurant for some they come in an array of useful sizes, merry Christmas.
I certainly hope they're made from a material that can handle the heat generated from open flames like a stovetop or fuel vessel. Stay safe out there.
Thank you for your informative video.
That's it, I've only got a desk with a bunch of paper, that's why I try everything in origami
The first one we made those for camping. Just used an old metal coffee can punched holes in the side, left the top untouched and set it on the propane stove.
The outdoor BS 150? Well we all know what BS stands for at 12 pounds. But this video is an awesome example of two different things coming together and making something completely usable. Reminds me of what happened when the first comma correcting lens were combined at the lens grinders workshop. The design was sent to completely different vendors for processing, just happened to be they used the same lens maker. So buy both items, repackage them, upcharge and sell as value added. Love it. Cheers.
One of the best tips I got was that you can use a PV panel as a radiant heater just as well as you can use it for generating power. So one outside the home connected direct with a cable to one inside the home is a complete renewable energy heating solution!
😯
Can i safely burn denatured alcohol in this heater? With a carbon monoxide detector close by?
This looks like a wood gasifier stove, inverted and supported, over a cat food can stove, all of which I already have on-hand. I think I'll try that.
Links to those two items you bought would be helpful.
You'll get both of eBay cheaper
In a very small space they tend to produce too much heat so my solution is to remove every other wick or more. Regarding fumes you could just add on a DOWNFLOW chimney ie it is cooling the exhaust and exiting it at a low point,
Is there a know to crank up all the wicks at once, or do you disassemble and pull them by hand? Thank you
I am seriously considering getting one of these setups since out last bout with power outage, the power outage was not so long (plus we had a generator) but the power surge before we lost power killed the igniter on the furnace. This wouldn't have been bad had it not been -10F (-23C) before the windchill, this made the inside temp at its lowest 5F (-15C) due to not having kerosene to use our big kerosene heater halfway through the night. Fortunately we were able to get a heating and cooling company to come out on Christmas Eve and put in a new igniter and test the furnace for any other issues, and yes there is now enough kerosene for a few days if need be on hand now.
Would this work with bio ethanol as a fuel instead of bio diesel? :)
💥 ☢️
Is there any way you can give links to the different items purchased in this video
Hi Robert it's so good to see your still doing the videos. I really enjoy your content alot. If there is any tracks on my channel that you may wish to use for intros etc just use them you have my full permission. Happy christmas my friend
The one provides the needs of the many.
I would be interested to know if you can swap the wick for carbon felt
Do you think that olive oil would work in this style stove 🤔and great videos on your channel 👍
are the fumes safe?
Great for cooking stew!
In the same time!😋😋
I have one of those cozy heaters although I think it has a different name and its a bit shorter.. right now I have 3 single wick alcohol lamps with utensil holders over them, there are several layers of wire mesh inside the utensil holders and I have a couple of sizes of cans with top and bottom removed on top of the perforated holder, the cans are around 140°f ambient is 50° and the room is 73°... not bad for around $8 including fuel! Ive looked at the chinese multi wick burner before but havent gotten one... you can add cans to the top of that or plant pots to help with radiating the heat
"I can't smell a thing". Right, CO and CO2 are odorless.
I've got an older version of this heater/stove. It's made in Germany by Hasag. Mine was free, as it came with the house I bought😁
Would it be possible for you to give us some company info on the products you purchased? searching Amazon is not giving me matching results by the name of the product though it might have a different name here in the United States or not be available
Hello i am surging your panabol heating presentation 🙏
The one where your hand shadow hits the thermometer it risses in exelerated stade🙏🎁🙏
Somhow youtube don't relay us when I do your name and panabol phocused heating point
A mabey grapite panabol🙏 I look🙏
Nope I get hunny solution😂😂😂
Ah than I have to redo it for miself🙏
To show the aditional potentional towart readings diverentional and how shades can trigger lower aircohesional behavieures of Forrests as wgnitor to forrestfires🙏
The links for those products on Amazon have gone have they?
Great video. Thanks. There here are dozens of types of stoves and "heaters" to go on-top on Amazon but with a bit of effort (still easier than building one myself lol!!) I found both items on Amazon (in the US) for ~ $20 USD/ea
Aladdin lamps have these long glass chimneys and burn very hot, but it's almost impossible to get their mantles anymore. If one fitted a metal chimney instead, I imagine it would make a good heater.
Hi. Parts for Aladdin lamps are readily available from Lehman's, and other online sources. If it's the mantle you're missing, though, you can easily convert your lamp to an excellent Argand lamp by simply raising the flame spreader in the burner about 1 cm. It will cleanly burn bright yellow, and give off tons of heat. I've been burning mine that way for years now, and much prefer the warm light it produces to the harsh white of the mantle.
@@Karl63601 That's very educational, thank you. It is just the mantle I'm missing. I've made a little holder that would hold a regular mantle, but haven't tried it yet. I was suggesting the metal chimney, because it would probably be better for radiating the heat than the glass chimney. How do you raise the flame spreader?
Okay. I'm assuming that you have a number 23 or23a lamp. You'll find that number on the wick adjuster. Lift off the gallery and chimney. Remove the mantle frame. Lower the wick. Now would be a good time to give the wick a good trim.The flame spreader is the thing in the middle of the burner that the wick surrounds. It looks like a thimble filled with holes. It is normally bottomed into the burner against an internal stop. Grip it with your fingertips (no tools needed) and twist and raise it about 1 cm. Toss the mantle frame into the bin, and replace the gallery and chimney. Job done. I've been working with these lamps since 1969, and love them with a passion.
@@Karl63601 Thanks for the advice. So I just raise it by fingers? That sounds easy enough. Yes, I have a 23. I did a good amount of research on their anatomy and was so amazed when I first got that blue flame. I've had some partial success with fitting a regular mantle on a custom frame. I would think such a frame would be very popular.
Glad you're finding the info useful. By the way, if you'd like to see this mod demonstrated, there's a fellow named Jeff Hall who lives on a boat and uses his lamp for heat and light. Go to his RUclips channel and take a look. Happy New Year!
ha ha, cheers for these - the " "biodiesel" " reference should help those confused folk.
These are all marketed as outdoor heaters, not that outdoorsis a great place to heat, but the liability diminishes to zero - re. those who will sadly KZ- ZB themselves - anyone with indoor combustion get a CO monitor..
Your awesome!
Great little gadgets, all you need do now is pop a metal biscuit tin full of your dry sand on top and you got a storage heater.
Aw man, I made a near-exact same blue flame vegetable oil burner. Seems like it already exists haha!
Great video as always Rob!
I've had a couple of those "cozies" for a few years. I'm by no means a Safety Sally, but from my experience, the black paint on top isn't any good. After dozens and dozens of burns, they still get a sickly sweet smell to them when burned hot. Incidentally, if you have a UCO Candelier three candle lantern, it fits atop those nicely and warms a small area.
Superb Sir!
Does anybody have links to both these parts on amazon?
Robert yea the health and safty folks would get a self induced full frontal lobotomy if they seen my home made weed wacker/trimmer head made from butter knives LOL
Great job. I did this with a plant pot on top of the kerosene stove earlier this year when they £11.. That's 64% inflation btw... But if you remove the outer ring of the stove you get the radiant heat coming from the sides as well and a lovely red glow!! convection and radiation..
Hi Robert, I was doing some research on plant pot heaters fueled by tea candles. And apparently what makes them dangerous is the paraffin contained in the wax, as paraffinic fumes in high concentration can create an explosion. Vegetable oils like the ones you used also contain paraffinic components. Hence, do you think they pose similar dangers as tea light candles? Thanks.
I'm sure Rob will direct you to the "Playing With Fire" vid.
The tldr is, don't do it if you aren't sure, any burner indoors (including a traditional gas boiler etc) has many risks including fumes, use enough ventilation and always have a carbon monoxide alarm.
There are horrible incidents with all sorts of heaters at this time of year, electric blankets, gas explosions, CO poisoning, etc. Properly assess the risks and then mitigate them. Like use a hearth and chimney for this sort of thing.
@@jimsmindonline thank you! would you happen to know if this could work with bio ethanol as a fuel? :)
I think that's why you need the blue flame it's burning clean. but check it out first.
I'm in the U.S. I found what looks to be the same stuff on Amazon. The heater is as low as $17.89. The burner is as low as $14.25. The burner says kerosene fuel.
A few notes on the stove: because they have a cotton wick you can burn ultra low sulfur diesel in them. These will bring a half gallon of water to a boil but not a gallon. The wicks are loaded folded so you get two diameters of wick in each hole. Do not pull the wick down to lower it. You're better off cutting it, for if you pull it down too far it's almost impossible to pull it back up and you've wasted a wick. Most kerosene/paraffin heaters smell mostly on startup and shutdown, but not much while running them. Running the stove without the rings would give you an 8-wick lantern, though you will have shadows from the frame. If you have trouble with your match lighting all 8 wicks at once, it will start if you light every other one.
The tiny filler cap had built in lighter - a tuft of cotton (better replaced with a tuft of rock wool!) on a thin steel bar. You light the tuft (it’s just come out of the fuel tank! 😁), and insert it down between the steel rings, to light the wicks. Works a treat, and you don’t burn your fingers trying to rebuilt the heater whilst it’s lit!
Would it work using the Carbon felt wickes??
Nice!!!
Great vis thanks. I have both they work great. Can you make the green one out of stainless household items and the forever wick that will burn used oil/bio diesel . Thanks Robert
Very cool, in a hot way.
Add $10 for a carbon monoxide detector and you’re golden.
I have run them stoves on diesel in the past, just keep the wicks clean, very hot. 👍
You might want to make a sterling engine/ heat fan to put on top on this heater to blow the heat around.
Doesn't work worth a damn. I have the identical components in the video. You have to have a fan behind it. I use a usb powered computer fan connected to a solar charged battery pack for mine. It works quite well, more like what I think you imagine with the stove fan.
How long once you fill that does it last for? And thank you for the video!
Will that top part make the lower part to hot?
Just get a carbon monoxide detector, if you don't already have one. If the safety bugs you. Looks like you could easily make a couple of them from tin cans and buy two gallons of paraffin to make 10 gallons of biodiesel which at current prices would mean around £80 of fuel for about £30.
KEEP A BIDDY WARM THIS XMAS
Hey M8, it's hot 🔥 downunda during your cold months. 🥶
Wanna do some stuff on how to keep it cool.... . Perhaps when you're cooking during one of those Summer Heatwaves you experience for a day or 3. 😃
Desert-sun RUclips channel has stuff of off grid cooling and heating
You wouldnt happen have the UPC or EAN code on the Cozy would you? I cant seem find it at Amazon
Links Please
Guidelines lol has it really come to this.
Great content once again 👏
Merry Christmas 🎅 🎄
So out your tea kettle on top of it!
Can you pist a link to both
Hi.. how long will a Litre burn for in one of them? Days, Hours ? Just to work out the cost of running it 24/7 in a small room on veggie oil perhaps thined on a little ethanol
Love your videos Robert, tell me can this stove be run on methanol
Brilliant only thing is Amazon won't post the heater for the top to northern Ireland.grahhh.
I got a paraffin heater, cost me about 80. This looks cheaper I hadn't considered buying one of those 8 wick mop stoves and the stovetop IR heaters.
Have you reviewed the little electric plug in heaters, that are popping up in all our adverts ?
can you use bioethanol in this? and is the carbon felt the best wick material if you have it at home?
seems one could also use a can of chafing dish fuel, perhaps safer indoors!
Hi Robert, I wonder if you have an opinion on the warning in the instructions: Maximum fire burning time: 6-7 hours, is there you reckon a genuine risk with using it for longer
How much full does it use/ hour?