Is yours as noisy as this one? I can't imagine anyone accepting the noise and the smell of kerosine. I used to live in a very poor country and we used kerosine lamps during power outages, and I know kerosine lamps are smoke factories. They are 10% light, 90% smoke. They stain the walls if you put the lamp close to the walls.
The noise is generated by not applying any/enough grease in all areas. And/or the wrong type. Quality kerosene has little smell though of course is still there. Hey, well done to the OP for saving another one though
I haven't seen one in years forgot they existed circa late 1800's to early 1900's wow! in arizona you use to be able to find them all over the state. not anymore. you have a treasure.
that's generally how and where you find them buried in caleche clay in the desert I know it looks that way LoL maybe he should have urinated on it for a month or two instead. But really thats how you find them in pack rat nests or other rock and tailings from mines.
you did a great job. beautiful. Dear friend, you are a very talented mechanic. . People at that time could not sleep with the noise of this fan. It smells like oil. But it's still so cool, it's worth the transformation.
Truly amazing piece, never thought I would come across something like this in my entire life, wonderfully restoration as well, hats off to you sir, viewer from trinidad
This is a misleading video/thumbnail, it is not that old. These were made from the 1960s to the 90s in pakistan, i know this because i operate one on my channel which was new in the 90s...
I agree no way 150 years old ,aluminum was a precious metal and was very expensive in 1876, things said does not add up,and the bearings would have been babbit
Interesting piece. You did a nice job. Friendly suggestion; Since you show close ups of the screw heads, clean them up prior to assembly. You can even do that with a drill and sand paper.
Je n'avais jamais vu ce modèle de ventilateur et son système d'entrainement des pales.. je le découvre ici! Belle restauration pour ce superbe objet, j'aime beaucoup et je prend l'abonnement à votre chaîne! 👍 (Depuis la Normandie, France)
So basically a sterling heat engine with matching heat source. Kerosene was basically used almost exclusively everywhere before electricity was very commonplace. Made sense to use what was already on hand in as many ways as possible. They probably would have invented a kerosene based refrigerator if electricity hadn’t come along.
Hmmm since it’s based on a sterling heat engine you might be able to just get rid of the kerosene bit and just put it on top of your wood burning stove. Should work just as well so long as the heat source was high enough. Most sterling heat engine fans are much smaller than this one. Being designed to be used on top of something like a major heating source such as a stove to help recirculate heat in a room. That way you might be able to get a room better heated using far less fuel. Rather than all of the heat going straight up to the ceiling some of it is redirected into the room. That way the energy from the woodstove is used twice. Once to heat the room itself. Then some of that wasted heat energy is used to power the fan itself. It’s the same idea of putting your electric ceiling fan on reverse in the winter months. Folks just do a UA-cam search for sterling heat engine woodstove.
Как вентилятор. Но без света. Он как самолёт работает на керосине. И крутит лопасти. Переносной вентилятор. Раньше не было света и многие вещи работали на топливе.
I saw a fan like this on Gunsmoke many years ago. I've always wondered how it worked. When I saw this pop up I thought I would finally find out how it works. I watched the whole video and still don't know how it works. What pushes the piston?
If you’re going through a full restoration then fix the screws, make sure you don’t rescratch the parts you just painted. You could have cleaned the dry oil off the piston, and straightened the bent parts. Other than that it was fine.
Sorry terrible restoration, didn't sand any of the panels, paint looks like crap the three yellow braces there were chips in the paint, all the screws were a mess, terrible job on bluing the screws. There is no way this is a 150 years old the bearing would be babbit, not roller bearings.
Elementy są nie precyzyjnie dopeszczone powiem delikatni . Tak stare urządzenia były ozdobą dla bogaczy i wygląd powinien zachwycać za mało precyzji w czyszczeniu i malowaniu efekt taki sobie . Proszę o więcej dokładności a nie pkazywanie pięcsety jak to Pan robi dokładnie w ten sposób to każdy potrafi odremontować wszelkie urzdzenie . Mam nadzieje że pana nie obraziłem a raczej psunełem do większej motywacji pozdrawiam M.J z POLAND P.S daje łapkę tylko za chęci
Super jest to odrestaurowany ale lepiej by było w niebieskim kolorze i od początku wypiaskowany a nie czyszczone szczotką pies w dzisiejszych czasach w XXI wieku się piaskuje wszystko i elektrolizuje pozdrawiam serdecznie👍👍👍👍
Can’t buy 150, maybe 80-90. Countersunk screws and gasket material. Kerosene fans were available in the mid 1800’s but this is much too modern….Would surprise me not if that unit was made in India or Pakistan.
This is a real curiosity. I've never seen an oil fan before... Would it be good to know when it was manufactured? It looks so late 19th century... Can I see correctly that it is powered by a Stirling engine? Congrats for rebuilding this rarity!
150 years my left foot. Its a sterling from the 1960's. How do i know? Ive got one!
Is yours as noisy as this one? I can't imagine anyone accepting the noise and the smell of kerosine. I used to live in a very poor country and we used kerosine lamps during power outages, and I know kerosine lamps are smoke factories. They are 10% light, 90% smoke. They stain the walls if you put the lamp close to the walls.
The noise is generated by not applying any/enough grease in all areas. And/or the wrong type. Quality kerosene has little smell though of course is still there. Hey, well done to the OP for saving another one though
Imprescionante😮
This is a 1960s sterling fan , I looked it up on google.very interesting video but not 150 years old.
It looked like it was 150 years old. You had better be honest. You would know better.
What's the point? In 1960, electricity existed.
not in nevada do some research@@someguy9778
@@someguy9778 In some parts of the world, it did not. I guess.
I haven't seen one in years forgot they existed circa late 1800's to early 1900's wow! in arizona you use to be able to find them all over the state. not anymore. you have a treasure.
Thanks for information
Was dumping it into mud for a few days a necessary step?
Yes it's very important
It speeds up aging 👍
that's generally how and where you find them buried in caleche clay in the desert I know it looks that way LoL maybe he should have urinated on it for a month or two instead. But really thats how you find them in pack rat nests or other rock and tailings from mines.
Stop doing that. Its not needed.
honestly just looks like you dumped mud on it waited for it to dry and "oooh rusty"
You are also right but you can see that there was a lot of nationalism in it too.
Dude stop hating on random creators
@@aahands nationalism?? Wwhhhaaaa..???
they all do the same.
Pointing out a fake restoration is not “hating.”
Amazingly rust free for being buried in mud, presumably for many many years
Nah, he just prolly put that in the mud for a few days and OoOoH rUsTy
It could have been actually abonded, but he most likely dumped it in the mud for more dramatic effect
This is a rare piece of fan . A true classic and a great 👍 Restoration work.
Many thanks!
My friend, you are a very talented mechanic. great job, congratulations. Franncisco Prata from Brazil.
you did a great job. beautiful. Dear friend, you are a very talented mechanic. . People at that time could not sleep with the noise of this fan. It smells like oil. But it's still so cool, it's worth the transformation.
from such a great Vietnamese mechanic he is good and what a compliment
Truly amazing piece, never thought I would come across something like this in my entire life, wonderfully restoration as well, hats off to you sir, viewer from trinidad
This is a misleading video/thumbnail, it is not that old. These were made from the 1960s to the 90s in pakistan, i know this because i operate one on my channel which was new in the 90s...
I agree no way 150 years old ,aluminum was a precious metal and was very expensive in 1876, things said does not add up,and the bearings would have been babbit
😊😊
haha right away in the 1st 5 secs I could tell this is not old lol
but dipped in mud 😂
It's pewter not aluminum
Esse dos bom aquece e refresca 😊
Fica dificil dizer se é um ventilador ou aquecedor, mas é uma máquina incrivél mesmo.
That was very interesting how the fan works. Good job restoring it. I am glad it worked. Thanks for sharing.😊
Thanks for watching!❤
Nice work sir it's looks good nice job nice 👍👍👍👍
Interesting piece. You did a nice job. Friendly suggestion; Since you show close ups of the screw heads, clean them up prior to assembly. You can even do that with a drill and sand paper.
What a concept.... lighting a fire to keep cool... i never knew these existed...
Great job on Rusty Antique Kerosene Oil Fan Restoration & Testing aa hands ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Thank you! Cheers!
ضمن تشکر بابت تهیه ویدیو بسیار جذاب، واقعا انرژی برق کمک بزرگی به پیشرفت صنعت و راحتی زندگی انسانها کرد 👌🏻🌹🌹
1° vez que eu vi, um ventilador funcionando a querosene, legal
Yes, of course it is a 100 year old fan ❤❤❤
Jadi tau sejarah❤
Very cool piece! Some more practice and this could be amazing
I have never heard of this before. It is very interesting.
Amazing, a fan with actual auto-like parts 😮
Yes no electricity 😇
Very nice🌹👍👏👏👏👏
Yep 150 years old that is and I'm a Dutch man lol
Fantastic restoration 😊
Many thanks!
I have to admit, I've never seen anything like it before. Totally interesting to say the least.
Thank You So Much !
A pessoa naquela época não conseguia dormir com o barulho deste ventilador.,mas se refrescava.valeu a transformação.
You are right, it is very loud, it is impossible to sleep with it.
Wow, i Have never seen one working with Kerosene Oil before. When i was.little we had a fridge that work with kerosene. Well done, great job.❤
Thank you!
I have a real hard time believing that kind of machining work came from 150 years ago.
yes because it's that old Thanks for watching ❤
Google is free you know…
They were made in the late 1800s
Good grief man, how long have clocks been made?🤔
Steam engines were machined far before that. Stirling's are a cake walk in comparison. 🤷
So this is how our Great,Great,Great Grandparents kept cool on hot days, Intresting.
Muito interessante, parabéns pelo trabalho
Thanks bro
Good Work 👍
Old Is Gold ✨️
Complimenti 😊😊😊
Thanks ❤❤❤
Great work ❤
Had NO Idea Such A Device Ever Existed!
Such a great object. I've never seen anything like that.
Thank you very much
Perfect work congratulations friend 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Thank you! Cheers!
Je n'avais jamais vu ce modèle de ventilateur et son système d'entrainement des pales.. je le découvre ici!
Belle restauration pour ce superbe objet, j'aime beaucoup et je prend l'abonnement à votre chaîne! 👍
(Depuis la Normandie, France)
So basically a sterling heat engine with matching heat source. Kerosene was basically used almost exclusively everywhere before electricity was very commonplace. Made sense to use what was already on hand in as many ways as possible. They probably would have invented a kerosene based refrigerator if electricity hadn’t come along.
Hmmm since it’s based on a sterling heat engine you might be able to just get rid of the kerosene bit and just put it on top of your wood burning stove. Should work just as well so long as the heat source was high enough. Most sterling heat engine fans are much smaller than this one. Being designed to be used on top of something like a major heating source such as a stove to help recirculate heat in a room. That way you might be able to get a room better heated using far less fuel. Rather than all of the heat going straight up to the ceiling some of it is redirected into the room. That way the energy from the woodstove is used twice. Once to heat the room itself. Then some of that wasted heat energy is used to power the fan itself. It’s the same idea of putting your electric ceiling fan on reverse in the winter months.
Folks just do a UA-cam search for sterling heat engine woodstove.
The did make refrigerators that ran on kerosene. My Stepmother's family had one when I was a kid. I remember seeing it.
So clean..n so nice..i like it..good job❤❤❤
Thank you! Cheers!
My 1972 Opel Commodore GS is now also 150 years old
lol, it's not 150 years old. A good cared vintage car from the 70ies will work long. This fan looks like it's old like my mother (about 60 years old).
@@SmaugAltair Oh boy, hope she is in a better shape 👍😁
Nice restoration
Thank you! Cheers!
Wow lovely new mud be nice blue paint work fake !
🙄🙄
Ignore the negative comments i think u did a fantastic job keep the videos coming
🤩 Hermoso, nunca ví un ventilador así, y todavía funciona 😃, buen trabajo, es un objeto muy raro 🤩
Thanks joseluismallo
Awesome Video 😊
Great close-ups!
🎉good knowledge about old kerosene fan 😂😂😮😮😮😅😅😅😅😅🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
It's amazing! Great job!
Thank you! 😄
Nice work as always. Such a great restoration 👏👏
Thank you very much!
Wow 😮
Good job sir 👍👍👏👏🥰😍💞🇵🇰🌹
💓Thanks
My question is: Does it work like a space heater or just as a fan?
Как вентилятор. Но без света. Он как самолёт работает на керосине. И крутит лопасти. Переносной вентилятор. Раньше не было света и многие вещи работали на топливе.
Only Fan
💀
Nunca tinha visto um ventilador movido a vapor 😮😊
E essa não foi a primeira vez. Esse ventilador não é movido a vapor e sim por um motor sterling movido a querosene.
أهنئك..
عمل رائع.
Good job 👍
nice job
Good for Brownout 😊
Seems noisy without a lubricant on the pistons.
Wow,I loved it , even it's 150 yrs old or new.
Thanks ☺☺
couldnt finish watching this hack
Nem sabia que isso existia
Top demais
O ventilador foi inventado em 1882 e comercializado apenas em 1910, impossivel esse ter 150 anos
I saw a fan like this on Gunsmoke many years ago. I've always wondered how it worked. When I saw this pop up I thought I would finally find out how it works. I watched the whole video and still don't know how it works. What pushes the piston?
like a scooter's piston works
What's a scooter's piston?@@aahands
If you’re going through a full restoration then fix the screws, make sure you don’t rescratch the parts you just painted. You could have cleaned the dry oil off the piston, and straightened the bent parts. Other than that it was fine.
You fix the screws
Wow amazing 😮
Thanks 😊
steps to make restoration vids buy 2 of something destroy one and replace with the good one
Using heat to cool you down.
Sorry terrible restoration, didn't sand any of the panels, paint looks like crap the three yellow braces there were chips in the paint, all the screws were a mess, terrible job on bluing the screws. There is no way this is a 150 years old the bearing would be babbit, not roller bearings.
Im guessing you could of done better.... you sound like that kind of person
It's a Ky Ko fan. Originals were made in the 1920s. Plans for building at home have been available ever since.
Nice job. Probably could have stayed with the blue color, and cleaned it up more to be a true restoration, but pretty good otherwise
WOW!
You don't see that
fan anymore.
OLD is NEW again.
Предварительно обработал глиной, это для лучшей очистки предполагаю?
Perfeito 👍
ว้าว...🥳🥳🥳🥳
😍
That is one clunker of a fan for someone to actually use but the reassembly was some of the most satisfying I've ever seen and heard
No matter the age, you have done a beauty job also do you have a sand blaster?
Motor kipas angin 😎
I'm amazed to see if you're a fan or HITTA
Such a nice device and such a bad restoration😢
Elementy są nie precyzyjnie dopeszczone powiem delikatni . Tak stare urządzenia były ozdobą dla bogaczy i wygląd powinien zachwycać za mało precyzji w czyszczeniu i malowaniu efekt taki sobie . Proszę o więcej dokładności a nie pkazywanie pięcsety jak to Pan robi dokładnie w ten sposób to każdy potrafi odremontować wszelkie urzdzenie . Mam nadzieje że pana nie obraziłem a raczej psunełem do większej motywacji pozdrawiam M.J z POLAND P.S daje łapkę tylko za chęci
I listened to you very well Thank you so much
Super jest to odrestaurowany ale lepiej by było w niebieskim kolorze i od początku wypiaskowany a nie czyszczone szczotką pies w dzisiejszych czasach w XXI wieku się piaskuje wszystko i elektrolizuje pozdrawiam serdecznie👍👍👍👍
Thanks for watching your video. Yes, you are absolutely right, we need sandblaster.
Nice but at least reduce the mudding prep and then cast markings can also be touched...
Can’t buy 150, maybe 80-90. Countersunk screws and gasket material. Kerosene fans were available in the mid 1800’s but this is much too modern….Would surprise me not if that unit was made in India or Pakistan.
Yes you are right, this is a good condition antique piece that we got.
@@aahands 150 year old technology is more fitting 😉
cool,hot air ?
Normal Air
Why did you cover it in mud before restore it?
it was buried in the soil
@@aahands
But by you, though. Wink wink
I never seen gas engine fan very interesting
I think that was in pretty good shape until somebody dipped it in mud to make it look older... And why not just wash the mud off?
This is a real curiosity.
I've never seen an oil fan before...
Would it be good to know when it was manufactured?
It looks so late 19th century...
Can I see correctly that it is powered by a Stirling engine?
Congrats for rebuilding this rarity!
Great point!
Good
Where was the fan found at?
Kerosene oil fans are more common in Arabic countries than anywhere else because they have huge oil reserves.
That's absolutely fine. Thanks for watching. ❤
スターリングエンジン式の扇風機とか実験模型でたまに見かけるけど、実用品は初めて見た。
good job sir..more videos..dont listen to jealous comments👍
I share you're video to my page
on which page.?
Poderia ter caprichado mais nessa restauração, dá pra deixar bem mais bonito.
no sanding of screws ugh,,,