I like the idea and this takes me back about 80 years when my own mother used paraffin which was evaporated in this manner, Also the old blow lamps had such an evaporator, I am so surprised that the flame is rather " carbonising flame" and it looks a little sooty. A small er hole would have resulted in a neutral flame, I guess. Congratulations for the workmanship, looking at the manner those hands were curling that copper, well it looks that those hands are rather experienced in handling gently the materials of a craftsman, Well done.
Well now that's a trip. The thumbnail popped up in my suggested feed, and I thought, 'well this looks interesting,' and then you get to the part where you have the materials on the table and I see copper tubing made where my dad works!
I'd use ethanol, then you don't have that smell that comes prom isopropanol, or mix it. 2/3 iso and 1/3 ethanol, this also get's rid of the smell. (And makes a nicer flame, too.)
At 1:37 this is the time you can get your tiny drill hole to drill straight into the tube before you compress it . makes the hole vertical instead of offside.
@@bamagregv 1/16 is the smallest I have and it works but you gotta be careful as it tends to bend . The problem remains that the hole has to be pointing up into the tubes above to get the vaporization effect to work .
Nice, you did a great job on these. I like that lager jar, the ones I had on hand were the small mason jars, when I tried the full size one it would not build up enough pressure to get the stove going. You did great!
On trumpets they use ice. And additive to make ice doft and slushy. But don’t remember the rest, if they heated quickly or just bended😊 i’m going to make a couple of those. I just need to find desired jars and stuff😊
Tilt the rounded copper tubing at horizontal level and drill as many holes. Believe this will enhance the heat energy of the copper stove since the flame is scattered at a wider area.
It would help your flame burn blue if you used a #60 to #65 drill bit. That is .0400" to .0360" diameters respectfully. Your drilled coil hole is too big thus a yellow flame and you will use less fuel. Most craft shops carry the bits.
He emptied the salt out after bending the tubes. Supposedly no salt remained. The yellow flame was caused by the ignition rising well above the vapor exit hole and also turbulence mixing air with the burn. I’m thinking a much smaller hole is the way to start the experiment then increase the size until a hot blue flame is achieved. Also, I would separate the upper coils a bit so the flame would be between them, not striking them directly which creates turbulence in the burn. Even though this is a simple design, there are several variables that need to be experimented with.
Excellent video, I'm definitely going to make one of these. Have you thought of pulling the wick through the pipe before you bend it ? You could use a coat hanger to do it, and it would probably make the pipe less likely to crimp.
Thank you the wick wont protect the pipe from getting kinked cause it’s not round shaped and it must be placed after bending the pipe so you can tell exactly where it is cause if you noticed the wick dosent go through the whole pipe only on both ends have fun and please be safe
Would put the wicks in the copper tubing before putting the copper in the cap. be easier to install. nice video. building better the destroying! On bending the tubes? where you bought your copper tubing and tube cutter, they sell different size "M" type soft copper benders?? a set in the states runs about 20 bucks. why waste the salt when sild on a bender and be done in one minute.
Maybe you could add a valve or something in the alcohol pipe to regulate flame output, i tried different things with empty shells from 9mm, .45 and 7.62, filled with acetone, they work kind of the same princip but less effective XD, but the less aceton was in them "the cooler" the flame got
Great video, nice little stoves, and I like your building techniques. I like using a pipe cap for starting alcohol. I also like the salt for tubing bending. I would like to try freezing water like for making trumpets, and compare the 2 techniques. What are your thoughts on using other fuels like E85? Can these stoves adapt to different fuels without having different sized ports? Liked and subscribed.
If the tube only went into the jar once instead of twice, you could put a valve inline and control the flame output. Can you use lamp oil or Olive oil in that too?
Hello! A friend of mine followed your directions andade one of these for me. The flame lights but goes out after about 10 minutes. He used denatured alcohol. Do you have any troubleshooting ideas? I'd appreciate your advice!
@@francotappa5882 I'm using denatured alcohol. It worked great last night until a pinhole leak appeared at one of the joints and flame started coming from there. I added more of the JB weld. Now it sputters and won't stay lit.
2010joen ... Yes, I noticed that he drilled a very tiny hole, possibly 1/16”. Maybe start with very small diameter drills, test run the stove, and increase drill size, retest, etc.. Until a blue flame is achieved. Since the tube is only 1/4”, possibly a 1/8” diameter hole is too large, and drilling two, or even three much smaller holes in a row would create a broader flame. To what advantage, I’m not sure, but like you mentioned, experimenting might get the desired blue flame.
I used 1.13 and it goes into a blow torch to cook with for camping , his looks to be way to big , its not made right , this should build pressure a blue hot flame should be seen and it will sound just like a canister stove and burn just as hot ,but it will only last about 25 minutes max before refill , also caution refilling , you dont want to put too much fuel in the jar , it will start to spit it out as a liquid and thats a fire waiting to happen , also you need to put the wick in proper , not far enough it wont feed , too far in , it will spit alot of liquid. Just play outside with it or make shur to have fire prep ready , hope i helped, also if you have a hard time keeping it going because the pressure keeps blowing out the flame go up one small size at a time , if the hole gets too big it will burn like you see here , if you want a candle like you see here just go strait to a 1,5 or higher .....
A million times better than the "coke can burner" in my opinion. Your teaching is perfect, thank you so much! Two questions though is this safe to burn in the house or tent if you're using the 99% alcohol with the smallest hole you can make? (I think I can get a pretty small hole by drilling before bending with the Dremel and taping the hole closed for the sand). And can you use a 4 cup mason jar or is that getting too big? (I'm a "Tim The Tool Man" type of guy). I'm going to a lot of fun playing with this one!
this is much cooler, but coke can stoves put out more heat, and can be made from rubbish in minutes. coil jets are really fun to build and experiment with! thin walled 4-6mm brass tube with a loose glass fiber wick gave me the best results.
@@Ucceah You can build your coke can stove during your emergency if you want, but I think I will build an Alcohol Stove in preparation for an emergency. I will build some extras for friends. The big jars will last for hours and has a MUCH cleaner burn.
@@@reasoningtruth chill, we're completely on the same page, mate. can stoves/cooking sets are super lightweight and effective survival-wise, and still a pretty awesome invention in their own right. i havent built one, though, but a couple of coil jets, one of which gets used frequently for fondue and a hot stone, and to fry up breakfast eggs out on my balcony. i just wanna share some enthusiasm and a bit of my experience from trial and error. ;) to drill the holes, i use a dull but still pointy exacto blade like an awl, that way it starts out thinner than a 0.5mm drill bit, but can easily be widened later on. too big of a jar will make it harder to build up pressure (which can be regulated by tightening and loosening the lid), and less handy as a cooker than a short, squat container. my little go-to one holds around half a cup of fuel, and burns for 1-2h, putting out an estimated ~600W of heat at foll throttle. (using 4mm brass tube. thicker tube can give you more oomph) i hope that's helpful.
@@Ucceah I'm neither too cold or too hot, I'm just right, thank you. Clearly, we are looking for different solutions. It seems you're looking for alternative cooking solutions whereas I'm looking for that plus heating alternatives. When we occasionally loose electric it gets really cold. Right now I use a plate full of the tealights but it gives off that candle smell and they only last a couple of hrs. whereas the 2 cup mason jar will burn for 4 hrs. I have tons of the 4 cup mason jars from all the Keifer I make. So, I'm looking for heaters that will last indoors for 8 hrs. and cook at the same time. I hope that helps our understanding.
methylated spirit (ethanol) is the better choice. it's quite a bit cheaper than rubbing alcohol (isopropyl), and burns cleaner, where iso tends to produce a yellow flame, that leaves soot instead of condenseing droplets of water, when cooking over it.
If the lid was copper, or brass, I would certainly try to solder the tubes. However the lid may be steel or aluminum. If steel, it would be a difficult soldering job, but if aluminum, it would be impossible.
Great video. I do have a question though. How will this stove work without using the capful of alcohol directly under the copper tubing...without the cap completely? If u us a torch to heat the tubing until vaporization begins, will it still burn until it runs out of fuel? I ask because I made one using a different video that didn’t use the cap, and mine burns for about 5 minutes before it just goes out. Maybe my wick isn’t far enough up the tube or the 2 holes the copper tube goes through on the jars lid isn’t sealed properly. Any ideas?
Yes paul also metal releases a lot of heat. Also notice how the flames multiplies in size after touching the coil above. Seriously richard. Watch the video. Solve it for yourself.
@@Darkstar..... I suspect the uninitiated would mostly not understand the process. Seriously Dark, put yourself in their shoes, stop trying to feel superior, or just don't comment, please!
Heating the coil of copper draws the fumes up into it faster and at more pressure like a siphon. Thats why you have to prime it by heating it first and also why the flame gets bigger when the coil heats up.
Could you try to burn used cooking oil instead of alcohol?
4 роки тому+1
..it is too heavy/dense to vaporize enogh. ...for used cooking oil take a jar, fill with salt then saturate with oil, push a candle down to the bottom in the center. ...the candle will warm the oil and it will be drawn up with the wax and burn. ...the veg oil needs to be preheated as same problem running veg oil in diesel in cooler climates, it must be preheated
The alcohol creates a positive pressure as it vaporizes, so there is no need to have a vent. In fact, having a vent would prevent it from working properly. The heated tube forces the alcohol to vaporize quicker, which is why this design is known as an alcohol jet stove.
Does all of the fire come from fuel burning inside of the small copper cap? Or does fuel move from the inside of the glass jar to outside of the glass jar?
What is safe fuel for indoor? Please show us how to make the log stand please! I am needing this to use in my home for emegency!.I am very thankful!! Grace
@@TooLitForAnInterview 'thanks so very much! i can not get everclear where i live. I do however have vodka b c i use it for herbal tinctures. I think your stoves are so innovative!Great job and thanks again, grace
In my experience, JB Weld degrades over time and will fail. I use High Temp RED RTV Silicone. The kind used to seal gasoline engines with. Over a year of use in my alcohol stove and the Silicone shows no sign of deterioration. JB Weld lasted only about 6 months. I'm not saying you are wrong. I'm just informing you of my experience.
Great video. I have a question about the 3 different stoves at the end of the video. Do the larger coils produce a larger flame? The flames all looked about the same size. Thanks
@@fixitsamo Thanks for your response. I like this build and will make one of these. I like the mason jar aspect because they are cheap and easy to find. One thing I would do different is I would use a stainless steel mason jar (available on the internet). That would make this stove almost indestructible and eliminate the hassle of broken glass in a pack or around camp. Keep up the good work, I'll check out your channel for other useful ideas.
The flame from the bottom heats the top of coil. This adds pressure which forces gas put the hole to burn. Then suction due to the hot air escaping sucks more gas up into the copper. This makes it act like a pump to burn well.
Can u explain what the coil do? Is it kind of the coil leaking gas of alcohol? Why it has to designed that way? (that spring design) why not just "U" shaped copper coil? Thx
Yes, at the 2:33 min mark, you can see him drilling the hole. The flame heats up the upper coil and turns the liquid into a vapor so it can burn as a vapor gas and not liquid. If you just did a U then the flame would never heat up the liquid and turn it into a vapor or gas. As the flame burns, it starts to suck or draw the vapor or gas back down and out the hole to be burned and the flame continues heating the upper coil. Kind of like a dog chasing its tail.
Beautiful and I love the addition of the little cap for lighting!
I made one. I didn't have 1/4" soft copper but I did have 1/4" aluminum pilot tubing so I used that and it worked fine.
The method you use to make the loop in copper without kinking is ingenious - thanks!
I like your demonstration better than others I've seen. So great! Thanks for sharing 👍
Thank you and welcome
I like the idea and this takes me back about 80 years when my own mother used paraffin which was evaporated in this manner, Also the old blow lamps had such an evaporator, I am so surprised that the flame is rather " carbonising flame" and it looks a little sooty. A small er hole would have resulted in a neutral flame, I guess. Congratulations for the workmanship, looking at the manner those hands were curling that copper, well it looks that those hands are rather experienced in handling gently the materials of a craftsman, Well done.
Well now that's a trip. The thumbnail popped up in my suggested feed, and I thought, 'well this looks interesting,' and then you get to the part where you have the materials on the table and I see copper tubing made where my dad works!
How small the world sometimes is :D
I'd use ethanol, then you don't have that smell that comes prom isopropanol, or mix it. 2/3 iso and 1/3 ethanol, this also get's rid of the smell. (And makes a nicer flame, too.)
Great job here,clear simple instructions, the best Ive seen. Many thanks
Great information and instructions that are clear and concise. Thank you for sharing you knowledge and expertise with us.
+Michelle Brown thank you and welcome
At 1:37 this is the time you can get your tiny drill hole to drill straight into the tube before you compress it . makes the hole vertical instead of offside.
Good Idea.
What size whole
@@bamagregv 1/16 is the smallest I have and it works but you gotta be careful as it tends to bend . The problem remains that the hole has to be pointing up into the tubes above to get the vaporization effect to work .
Cool idea, and it's art.
It's burning a bit too orange and the flame is too tall for a practical camping stove/burner,
but you still get a thumbs up!
Nice, you did a great job on these. I like that lager jar, the ones I had on hand were the small mason jars, when I tried the full size one it would not build up enough pressure to get the stove going. You did great!
+Iridium242 hey Iridium i just watched you're video great job and thank you
thanks!
What size hole needs to be drilled in the tube? The video only stated 'smallest' drill bit.
I think you could just solder copper to tin instead of using the silicone.
On trumpets they use ice. And additive to make ice doft and slushy. But don’t remember the rest, if they heated quickly or just bended😊 i’m going to make a couple of those. I just need to find desired jars and stuff😊
Tilt the rounded copper tubing at horizontal level and drill as many holes. Believe this will enhance the heat energy of the copper stove since the flame is scattered at a wider area.
do you have a video link that shows what you are talking about?
Could you put a metal mesh in the flame to act as a radiant space heater? Or would that make too much carbon monoxide?
There is a tool for working with soft copper called a hand bender... I never tried to bend a full circle, but I'm pretty sure it can be done
Ruthless Cardigan or fill tube with fine sand..also use a spring that will just barley slide over...both will prevent from kinking and pinching
great, your projects are always beautiful and well made! Hello Friend
+Work Space thank you
Btw keep up the good work great channel you got there
I will do my best and take example from you :)
Preheat the copper tube with the flame beforehand, then it will be softer to bend :)
Is there any way to control the flame.
Well done video for an item that can actually be useful in an emergency situation.
Best example I've seen so far. Thanks!
Best version of this build video I've seen yet
That's a clever idea thanks for sharing mate.
It would help your flame burn blue if you used a #60 to #65 drill bit. That is .0400" to .0360" diameters respectfully. Your drilled coil hole is too big thus a yellow flame and you will use less fuel. Most craft shops carry the bits.
Molon Lobe Satcatcher he used salt onside tubes : those the yelowish flamme !
He emptied the salt out after bending the tubes. Supposedly no salt remained. The yellow flame was caused by the ignition rising well above the vapor exit hole and also turbulence mixing air with the burn. I’m thinking a much smaller hole is the way to start the experiment then increase the size until a hot blue flame is achieved. Also, I would separate the upper coils a bit so the flame would be between them, not striking them directly which creates turbulence in the burn. Even though this is a simple design, there are several variables that need to be experimented with.
Thank you samo for the detailed illustration. I guess the flame heats the air so that the alcohol gets sucked and filled the pipe?
Thank you yes exactly
Where did you get the latern wick? Cdn tire? What size is your 'smallest drill bit"?
+Mech-Eng yes canadien tire camping section and i used a 1/16 size drill bit
Excellent video, I'm definitely going to make one of these. Have you thought of pulling the wick through the pipe before you bend it ? You could use a coat hanger to do it, and it would probably make the pipe less likely to crimp.
Thank you
the wick wont protect the pipe from getting kinked cause it’s not round shaped and it must be placed after bending the pipe so you can tell exactly where it is cause if you noticed the wick dosent go through the whole pipe only on both ends have fun and please be safe
Got it!
Wow, genius idea; I love it! Could I make a bigger one like use an 8oz - 16oz mason jar with bigger copper tubing to make stronger fire?
I was thinking the same thing.......
Would put the wicks in the copper tubing before putting the copper in the cap. be easier to install. nice video. building better the destroying! On bending the tubes? where you bought your copper tubing and tube cutter, they sell different size "M" type soft copper benders?? a set in the states runs about 20 bucks. why waste the salt when sild on a bender and be done in one minute.
Great job as usual!
+Katy Cand thx katy😀
Smallest drillbit. How small where the one you used
I guess your stove is better than my coleman stove definitively damaged after a one week camp on the beach. and it's cheaper ! THANK YOU
Can u add cheap cooking oil or something into d alcohol jar? How about surround d alcohol jar with a bowl of water just in case? Thanku
Maybe you could add a valve or something in the alcohol pipe to regulate flame output, i tried different things with empty shells from 9mm, .45 and 7.62, filled with acetone, they work kind of the same princip but less effective XD, but the less aceton was in them "the cooler" the flame got
Is there a reason why you make the top so tight? If you leave a gap between the coils then the flame could go through.
It needs the heat from the flame to expand the vapor as it is drawn towards the burn hole.
Excellent and to the point!
Thank you!
put wick before bending. flame is oxygen deficient
Easier to bend copper if you anneal it first by heating to red hot and plunging into cold water.
Easier to bend yes, less prone to kinking, no. But yeah, I see your point. Just clarifying for possible others.
How do you keep the alcohol from evaporating when not in use?
There is only that small hole, so I would guess evaporation would be minimal...
You can unscrew the cap and put it back in the bottle.
Use a spare cap... these type of jars have 2 peice tops, ring, lid, you can just carry a extra lid.
What is the tool used to cut the copper tubing ? Can I use kerosene ? And will kerosene burn longer ?
Is the copper "thimble" siliconed to the jar lid ? You know, the copper cap that you first put alcohol in to get it started. Thanks
I only used silicone around the copper tube
nice work . i have a question can we use spirit instead of alcohol?
+abdullah tahir
I haven't tried it yet
abdullah tahir spirit is actually methanol. The other name is methyl alcohol, wood alcohol, etc.
is it possible to make a few of these into a mini furnace?
That's what i was gonna build out of a ammo can with a heat exchanger venting it outside and a little fan
Great video, nice little stoves, and I like your building techniques. I like using a pipe cap for starting alcohol. I also like the salt for tubing bending. I would like to try freezing water like for making trumpets, and compare the 2 techniques. What are your thoughts on using other fuels like E85? Can these stoves adapt to different fuels without having different sized ports? Liked and subscribed.
+Buddy Clem
Thank you i only tried it with 99%alcohol
Cause it dosent make a lot of smoke when it burns
I will try and get back to you
If the tube only went into the jar once instead of twice, you could put a valve inline and control the flame output.
Can you use lamp oil or Olive oil in that too?
Какой умница!!! Очень хорошая идея , спасибо...
Hello! A friend of mine followed your directions andade one of these for me. The flame lights but goes out after about 10 minutes. He used denatured alcohol. Do you have any troubleshooting ideas? I'd appreciate your advice!
Maybe the alcohol is low %? I use 96% ethil and it worked great!
@@francotappa5882 I'm using denatured alcohol. It worked great last night until a pinhole leak appeared at one of the joints and flame started coming from there. I added more of the JB weld. Now it sputters and won't stay lit.
@@dulcefius You may still have a leak, empty the jar and plug the hole in the pipe, then submerge the whole thing and see if there's any air escaping.
I used hand sanitizer and it works great!!
How did you attach or glue the copper cap o to the mason jar lid?
perfect for my college situation
You can also use sand if you don't have salt or you can use water (just seal end thoroughly ). I use JB We
D to seal the copper tubing to the lid.
2010joen ... Yes, I noticed that he drilled a very tiny hole, possibly 1/16”. Maybe start with very small diameter drills, test run the stove, and increase drill size, retest, etc.. Until a blue flame is achieved. Since the tube is only 1/4”, possibly a 1/8” diameter hole is too large, and drilling two, or even three much smaller holes in a row would create a broader flame. To what advantage, I’m not sure, but like you mentioned, experimenting might get the desired blue flame.
Salt dissolves. Easy removal. Derp. Water leaks. Simple. Not complicated
how many millimeters does the burner hole have to be?
I used 1.13 and it goes into a blow torch to cook with for camping , his looks to be way to big , its not made right , this should build pressure a blue hot flame should be seen and it will sound just like a canister stove and burn just as hot ,but it will only last about 25 minutes max before refill , also caution refilling , you dont want to put too much fuel in the jar , it will start to spit it out as a liquid and thats a fire waiting to happen , also you need to put the wick in proper , not far enough it wont feed , too far in , it will spit alot of liquid. Just play outside with it or make shur to have fire prep ready , hope i helped, also if you have a hard time keeping it going because the pressure keeps blowing out the flame go up one small size at a time , if the hole gets too big it will burn like you see here , if you want a candle like you see here just go strait to a 1,5 or higher .....
@@4486xxdawson thank you
😮 wow amazing and simple 👌!!!
A million times better than the "coke can burner" in my opinion. Your teaching is perfect, thank you so much! Two questions though is this safe to burn in the house or tent if you're using the 99% alcohol with the smallest hole you can make? (I think I can get a pretty small hole by drilling before bending with the Dremel and taping the hole closed for the sand). And can you use a 4 cup mason jar or is that getting too big? (I'm a "Tim The Tool Man" type of guy). I'm going to a lot of fun playing with this one!
this is much cooler, but coke can stoves put out more heat, and can be made from rubbish in minutes.
coil jets are really fun to build and experiment with! thin walled 4-6mm brass tube with a loose glass fiber wick gave me the best results.
@@Ucceah You can build your coke can stove during your emergency if you want, but I think I will build an Alcohol Stove in preparation for an emergency. I will build some extras for friends. The big jars will last for hours and has a MUCH cleaner burn.
@@@reasoningtruth chill, we're completely on the same page, mate. can stoves/cooking sets are super lightweight and effective survival-wise, and still a pretty awesome invention in their own right. i havent built one, though, but a couple of coil jets, one of which gets used frequently for fondue and a hot stone, and to fry up breakfast eggs out on my balcony. i just wanna share some enthusiasm and a bit of my experience from trial and error. ;)
to drill the holes, i use a dull but still pointy exacto blade like an awl, that way it starts out thinner than a 0.5mm drill bit, but can easily be widened later on. too big of a jar will make it harder to build up pressure (which can be regulated by tightening and loosening the lid), and less handy as a cooker than a short, squat container. my little go-to one holds around half a cup of fuel, and burns for 1-2h, putting out an estimated ~600W of heat at foll throttle. (using 4mm brass tube. thicker tube can give you more oomph) i hope that's helpful.
@@Ucceah I'm neither too cold or too hot, I'm just right, thank you. Clearly, we are looking for different solutions. It seems you're looking for alternative cooking solutions whereas I'm looking for that plus heating alternatives. When we occasionally loose electric it gets really cold. Right now I use a plate full of the tealights but it gives off that candle smell and they only last a couple of hrs. whereas the 2 cup mason jar will burn for 4 hrs. I have tons of the 4 cup mason jars from all the Keifer I make. So, I'm looking for heaters that will last indoors for 8 hrs. and cook at the same time. I hope that helps our understanding.
methylated spirit (ethanol) is the better choice. it's quite a bit cheaper than rubbing alcohol (isopropyl), and burns cleaner, where iso tends to produce a yellow flame, that leaves soot instead of condenseing droplets of water, when cooking over it.
would using a soldering iron work better to seal the pipe and the lid instead of silicone?
If the lid was copper, or brass, I would certainly try to solder the tubes. However the lid may be steel or aluminum. If steel, it would be a difficult soldering job, but if aluminum, it would be impossible.
Its about a simple process. Simple cheap. No skill.
Great video. I do have a question though. How will this stove work without using the capful of alcohol directly under the copper tubing...without the cap completely? If u us a torch to heat the tubing until vaporization begins, will it still burn until it runs out of fuel? I ask because I made one using a different video that didn’t use the cap, and mine burns for about 5 minutes before it just goes out. Maybe my wick isn’t far enough up the tube or the 2 holes the copper tube goes through on the jars lid isn’t sealed properly. Any ideas?
How can I reduce theblack smoke?
Soak your wicks in vinegar and let them dry. Then use as normal.
Do not recommend using a glass jar because if it drop it will not turn into a gasoline bomb, sort of. A metal jar is safer.
If I had a much bigger container/jar could you use 2 or 3 coils on the same lie to get 3 flames and more heat?
+TheJunkyardgenius
I haven’t tried it yet with more than 1 coil
Great idea , AND, I have all the items to build me one, maybe two. Does it produce enough heat though?
What is "enough heat" exactly?
Hello. What is the purpose of the coil and why is it better than a simple wick (genuine question). Thank you.
Yes paul also metal releases a lot of heat. Also notice how the flames multiplies in size after touching the coil above. Seriously richard. Watch the video. Solve it for yourself.
@@Darkstar..... I suspect the uninitiated would mostly not understand the process. Seriously Dark, put yourself in their shoes, stop trying to feel superior, or just don't comment, please!
Heating the coil of copper draws the fumes up into it faster and at more pressure like a siphon. Thats why you have to prime it by heating it first and also why the flame gets bigger when the coil heats up.
Bloody awesome video mate¡ thanks heaps. I am gonna go off and make one for when shtf!!!!!!!?
Amazing ❤
Por fin dí con una explicación clara de cómo hacer esta estufa. Muchas gracias buen trabajo.
Pretty cool invention buddy! Good video!
Very cool! Thanks for sharing your build :)
Thank you bad ass nice to learn thanks again
Excellent, thank you very much
You are welcome!
Could you try to burn used cooking oil instead of alcohol?
..it is too heavy/dense to vaporize enogh.
...for used cooking oil take a jar, fill with salt then saturate with oil, push a candle down to the bottom in the center.
...the candle will warm the oil and it will be drawn up with the wax and burn.
...the veg oil needs to be preheated as same problem running veg oil in diesel in cooler climates, it must be preheated
No. Cooking oil will not vaporize like alcohol.
Don't you need a small vent in the jar to prevent vacuum from stopping the fuel flow as the level burns down?
The alcohol creates a positive pressure as it vaporizes, so there is no need to have a vent. In fact, having a vent would prevent it from working properly. The heated tube forces the alcohol to vaporize quicker, which is why this design is known as an alcohol jet stove.
Very cool video
rápido e fácil de fazer e transportar serve tbm de lamparina muito bom .
From what I understand you can put sand in the copper tube when wrapping around the handle
Adding sand will prevent the tube from getting kinked while bending it
Thats only good while the copper straw is still new after its all burned up - makes it hard for the flame to maintain not quenchen
A cerpentina pode ser de alumínio
exelente video saludos desde sinaloa mexico
Eu não entendi o seu inglês, mais seu trabalho tá ótimo 👍👍👍
Does all of the fire come from fuel burning inside of the small copper cap? Or does fuel move from the inside of the glass jar to outside of the glass jar?
The heat from the flame pressurizes the inside, the the alcohol turns to vapor as it’s forced up the wick and out the drilled hole.
The small hole was never discussed. What size hole
Apakah aman menggunakan kaca seperti itu ?
I love it !!
Hola muy buen vídeo, una pregunta: ¿se podría hacer lo mismo pero con gasolina?
La gasolina es contaminante y produce monoxido de carbono. No es buena para cocinar. Ademas es muy inestable.
How long will one of these burn?
Look up the video at 6:10
- "Северный поток - 2" приостановили, и вот. 😂
What is safe fuel for indoor? Please show us how to make the log stand please! I am needing this to use in my home for emegency!.I am very thankful!! Grace
be sure to have good ventilation if burning indoors. alcohol should be safe. I hope everything is okay for you.
@@TooLitForAnInterview 'thanks so very much! i can not get everclear where i live. I do however have vodka b c i use it for herbal tinctures. I think your stoves are so innovative!Great job and thanks again, grace
Grace Brunelle alcohol is a safe fuel. Burns clean
can we use kerosene?
If you're in a well ventilated area, yes.
Does it run on diesel or cooking oil?
Nope, alcohol or White naphta with different drill size
@@francotappa5882 and with gasoline mixed with alcohol is it right? because my intention is to make it to use as light.
@@francotappa5882 what size drill for white gas
@@slicktmi don't know exactly, but try 0.5 ir 0.75mm
@@francotappa5882 dang that's super small where can i even find a bit that small lol
Can we use kerosene instead of alcohol? Because its is far cheaper than alcohol.
20 years ago I saw such a thing in guys fishing.
What type of alcohol do you use?
99%
Isopropyl
I use 91% Isopropyl alcohol Very clean flame.
Methyl-alcohol burns cleaner.
very thanks
very good, I love it
Thank you.
It will work with denatured alcohol?
...for better bonding use JB Weld
In my experience, JB Weld degrades over time and will fail. I use High Temp RED RTV Silicone. The kind used to seal gasoline engines with. Over a year of use in my alcohol stove and the Silicone shows no sign of deterioration. JB Weld lasted only about 6 months. I'm not saying you are wrong. I'm just informing you of my experience.
@@2010joen
Thank you for your information, I'm new at this and really don't want any regrets.., thanks again
Great video. I have a question about the 3 different stoves at the end of the video. Do the larger coils produce a larger flame? The flames all looked about the same size. Thanks
No they both have the same holes
Cause i used the same drill bit size
@@fixitsamo Thanks for your response. I like this build and will make one of these. I like the mason jar aspect because they are cheap and easy to find. One thing I would do different is I would use a stainless steel mason jar (available on the internet). That would make this stove almost indestructible and eliminate the hassle of broken glass in a pack or around camp. Keep up the good work, I'll check out your channel for other useful ideas.
The Stainless steel option is perfect
Thx for the support have fun and let me know if you have more questions
Agradeço o vídeo! 👍✌
Cual es la función del cobre? Porfa expliquenme
The flame from the bottom heats the top of coil. This adds pressure which forces gas put the hole to burn. Then suction due to the hot air escaping sucks more gas up into the copper. This makes it act like a pump to burn well.
@@gd.ritter grax bro
Can u explain what the coil do? Is it kind of the coil leaking gas of alcohol? Why it has to designed that way? (that spring design) why not just "U" shaped copper coil? Thx
The coil acts as an evaporator anc changes liquid fuel into gas.
so the coil has hole in it? why just dont "u" shaped coil?
Yes, at the 2:33 min mark, you can see him drilling the hole. The flame heats up the upper coil and turns the liquid into a vapor so it can burn as a vapor gas and not liquid. If you just did a U then the flame would never heat up the liquid and turn it into a vapor or gas. As the flame burns, it starts to suck or draw the vapor or gas back down and out the hole to be burned and the flame continues heating the upper coil. Kind of like a dog chasing its tail.
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