@@patrickhall3878 did you move the mantel or igniter seems like if you get spark with no mantel it would have to be the mantel getting in the way hard ti say without me seeing it good luck brother
@@jasonwildebrandt2034 thanks brother and I hope you had a great bday man the river was like chocolate milk so I just went to the lake lol I'm ready to get some more river footage wouldn't it be fun if me you and Steve could do a stretch of river togather someday be easy man
@@darrellbigdaddydcarter9224 Ain't heard from you in a while I was hoping everything was okay but I figured you were just busy with life and doing the DJ stuff. Thank you for sharing the awesome content
I just picked up one of these at a garage sale. I am having poor burning with large flames and not a glowing mantle. I don't hear the usual rushing of gas that I would expect even when the gas valve is turned up. I saw your other video and you spoke about a valve part that was reversed. I need to check out the gas tank and valve assembly because I know this should burn real bright.
First thing make sure your air times are free off spider webbs if that don't work sounds like you may have to turn the little mushroom looking jet around good luck brother
Great video my friend. I just cleaned out a barn and found a 1919 Coleman quicklite. It’s complete but it needs a cleaning. But I’m touching it until I know the best way to clean it without knowing what and what not to do.
Man thanks brother I'm finaly able to get back out were u love to be. Man lol and that bubble is a float so if my rid gose over it will float lol I know it looks weried but if it will save a rod then so be it lol
I love Coleman kerosene lanterns. I have several models in my collection, including a 201 just like that one. It’s bright. Other models to watch for: 237: This is a large, single mantle lantern. About the same size as a regular 220. It has a large diameter generator. It has a cast brass mixing chamber, which I think absorbs heat better, resulting in less smell. It uses a peerless 111 mantle, burns kerosene and is extremely bright! Brighter than the 201. 249: This lantern is the size and style of the 242’s. It too has a large diameter generator, brass mixing chamber, and uses the peerless 24a mantle. It is extremely bright, as the 237, yet more compact. Also, these lanterns will run regular gas or Coleman fuel as well….just be sure to always preheat the generator before lighting.
I've saw the new ones to but like you said ..the old Ones is were it is I have an older one single mantle takes a 111 and it's bright I think I have a video 336 compared to the 237 check it out thanks for commenting
@darrellbigdaddydcarter9224 I'm just starting to collect lanterns. So far I got a 1981 220K. Works perfectly. I'd like to find an old kerosene lantern, a big hat and a military lantern.
@@aikidragonpiper71 man I have several military lanterns I finaly scored a box set last year I have alot of them on here man good luck hunting and have fun it is alot of fun getting them shining again
Are these lamps meant to have a a smaller clear glass globe that protects the mantles? I've seen some that do and I was wondering if the one I was looking at was missing parts or not. The one I've got my eye on is from 1948 if that helps.
On my inverted Kamplite lantern it takes a Big Mantle I put a Coleman 1111 the 500 CP mantle that over burn stopped it take less time to heat up the generator to with 1111 on it let it run for minute or so before you open her up all the way I promise you it will run better they take while to heat up completely because the generator in weird spot on the inverteds but I was have same issues you were with yours the bigger 500cp mantle fixed all of it it just takes longer for get fully heated up to vaporize that fuel the generator is huge is why
The Jupiter is a nice lantern. I ordered one years back. I lined the interior tank with POR 15 to prevent leaks and rust. It put out so much heat that I converted the top to a cooker. It gets hot enough to cook and I have cooked flap jacks, eggs, heated water for coffee, warmed up meals. Absolutely a great thing. And I use diesel as fuel.
Recommended with all of the Dietz with 7/8 wick (Air Pilot, D-Lite, Blizzard and Jupiter) to use either kerosene or Klean-heat kero substitute because that cheap lamp oil doesn't wick well on wider wicks. You get the same light (same wick size) for all 4 models of lamp.