So did I. But in fact, this is a very old trick every user of a steam machine (locomotive, crane, etc.) knows. They use the speed of the steam to improve the draft of the coal fire at the beginning.
I like the idea ... And you can reduce temperature of the handle just by putting the handle, on the top side of the handle while only having a big rectangular gap for air input... And a curve slider door to control the airflow...
@@anthonyv6962 unlike your comment, I was offering him constructive criticism. He could take it or leave it. I’ll help you out with the definition of Constructive Criticism since you seem to be a little daft. Criticism intended to provide suggestions for improvement without insulting the recipient.
It was pretty simple to follow. The water in the top tank boils and the steam across the burning oil draws more air across, creating the blowtorch effect.
LOL right? we haven't even touched the tip of the iceberg... Harnessing the power of steam/hydrogen will eventually be the answer to energy independence allowing us finally kick big oil to the curb for good, thus allowing us begin fixing the near irreparable damage that they have done simply out of greed. @@bobsaturday4273
@@bobsaturday4273stop being rude. Just say nothing if you don’t like what is said. We all need to get along and not let them win by even not being united on you tube!!!!!
Does seem to me that many businesses like many I've worked at before all use used oil burners yet none have a tank of water over them to make a boiler to get more heat and spread the heat from the pressure built up. Could maybe even turn a generator. Getting everything you can out of the used oil.
@flatout5815 actually cogeneration is used quite bit in oil and gas, especially for remote installations where power line and substation instalation would be cost prohibitive
I was so amazed by the miracle of creation. Since most of us aren’t welders or metal workers please list the prefabricated equivalents. Looked like that took many hours to make. That same amount of time could have yielded enough fire starter balls made from wood scrap and sawdust and wax, fat, waste oil can even be used if the fire is outside and you don’t cook over the fire for a while which you wouldn’t anyway. Plus why are you lighting that so frequently? Light it at the start of winter and it goes out at the start of spring.
Dude, go away. Most of us are here for the creator aspect of this content. Literally none of us came to find out what we do about wet wood for our wood stove this winter so stfu…🙄😒
@@mister-roboit should make you feel awkward when somebody implies that you have genius.... One can only imagine how small one would feel in the Giant mind of a genius? 😊
Terrific! Thank you for sharing your skills and knowledge! Thanks to the little red Robot for keeping our attention to your details. A Job well done! 👍✌️🇬🇧☺️
you can make an angle grinder stand, which can be used to accurately cut large tubes as well if you make some mechanism that allows you to turn a tube around while its clamped as well, its especially good for projects where you need many pieces of thin steel or if you cut hardened metal like threaded rods maybe to boost efficiency you wanna insulate the bottom container a bit, maybe make like a disc with holes on the sides so you get the steam contacting a lot more oil? very cool concept, its a waterpowered blowtorch essentially im sure this would turn into a flamethrower if one was to try a regular volatile fuel with this
@@vitorhugomendesdelima-gy4tr The oil is the fuel. The water only provides steam to force air through the burn chamber. It takes the place of a Blower Fan, or a 12 metre flue (Chimney).
My reply is to some commenters here. This is a build of a very useful tool. That obviously is to be used in an environment that doesn't have a 3D printer, plasma torch or even electricity. If your broke down on the side of some unknown road, no one for miles. All you need is a lighter, a little motor oil & water. This will get wet wood burning for signal fire & warmth. Get it? Good.
What is the diameter of the water nozzle? Good luck, thank you I don't know. There are no designs to follow. Only this video. You will need some time in the workshop to figure out everything about this build. But, for someone who travels on long desolate roads or off-road. This would be a #1 tool to have if you need to camp in a wet environment & all you can collect is wet wood. This tool will dry it enough to get a campfire started. In a wet environment this tool will be the difference between a warm night & a soggy cold night. But, you can't go buy this one yet. You want one, you build it for yourself Good luck & don't burn your hand.
You're supposed to place wood next to or under your wood stove to dry it out before use. Means you have zero need to go outside to get more fuel during the night for at least 2 or 3 days depending on how much heat you actually need.
Yep, that's what we did back during the early 80s as a kid growing up in the middle of nowhere West Virginia. One of my chores was to stack wood about 3-4 feet from the woodstove along a wall close by. The stack of wood lasted us about a week. I'm guessing it was several hundred pounds of wood. It was a single stack about 3 !/2 feet high and about 7 feet long.😂😂
What a solid, go to, tool to have in my go-bag for camping. This is brilliant. I get it, don't need schematics to make my own. I would recommend filing for US Patents on your designs (you never know, something might become a payday). Thanks for sharing your build. Incase the jetter port from the water container might become plugged from foreign material. I will modify your build by adding an adjustable pressure relief cap for saftey, incase left unattended. I have an idiot for a brother. Great build!
I place waste oil into the lower part. Whilst in the video a brand-new oil bottle can be seen, from which flows perfectly clean, crystal-clear oil. Where do you get that quality waste oil?
A great method of bending small pipes is to pack them full of sand. You can either pinch off the end and then start packing full of sand and then pinch off the other end make your bends and then cut the ends off. What does method you can do some real crazy bends. Great Concepts love your work. Please keep up the good work
any tips on how to get the sand back out again? i was using this for bending some aluminium tubes around a thicker pipe in a spiral which would then be fed with water and a gasburner would turn the water into steam- but it took quite a while to get the sand back out again
Hopefully the sand you use was dry. Cuz if not it's going to be a b**** to get out. I would warm it slowly and drive off any excess water and then just keep tapping it with a screwdriver or a piece of wood and it should work its way out. There is another method but it cost more and if I told you I'd have to that's where you at the super secrets. Punishable by will you know
Salt is a better option then sand simply because to get it out of a thinner tube simply use water to dissolve the salt. Sugar, in my opinion isn’t any good as it burns.
Hey Mr. Robo I am very Pleased that you Uploaded this Technology I never knew this way Before but now i really feel Happy that you somehow came to know this trick Thanks for Sharing this
Stack a 1/2 cord near stove to dry out. We used to get six cords a year. Stacked outside all summer to dry then moved it all to the basement early fall
To create steam which increases burn. Everybody that watched video, knows he's burning oil. You might try listening more than talking, and you would have know this and known how useless you comment is. Have a great day.
I bet 'the industry' loves you. Use care. For all your fantastic, elegant, genius heating inventions & innovations are exactly the kind of things that have gotten some people 'disappeared'.
Well, unlike thirty years ago when it was much easier to ridicule someone on personal level and to hide information, this video has already been seen probably tens of thousands of times by knowledgable people who know how to replicate this. So, information is already out there and it can only further evolve.
I’ve lived I the woods for the last 40 years we normally if the wood is wet just put the next few pieces your going to burn on top of the stovetop to dry out a little more. I’ve used my propane torch to start lots of fires but if you have electricity my favorite is using a heat gun it will fan the fire and dry out the wood it will also start a fire no matches or torches or starting fluids needed just stack up your Kinlin and your wood turn on your heat gun and blow till you have fire it only takes a minute or two and if you’re fire dies down a little just blow it again. Don’t use a hair dryer they will work but the end will melt from the heat in the stove you can get a nice heat gun for $15-20 and they last for years you can also use them to strip paint and other stuff plus you don’t have the smell of burning used oil and when you switch it off it’s off unlike the blow torch in this video you’re going to have to do something with this till it goes out I have a old style blow torch similar to this one it’s a pain to start but you can turn it off when you’re done using it unlike this model good luck and don’t burn your house down 😂
hello and respect; I have a question: doesn't the steam that hits the oil fire with such high pressure break down into oxygen and hydrogen, thus also contributing to the combustion ?
No, only electrolysis can break that molecular bond. If mere pressure and heat could break water into hydrogen and oxygen, then volcanic vents under the ocean would be flaming infernos...
Actually yes. The steam reacts with the glowing carbon (soot) producing carbon monoxide and hydrogen. They used to produce coal gas with this reaction.
Hola Amigo soy Inventor , vivo en Chile ... Y le doy gracias a Dios por encontrar tu Canal ... Eres un genio ... Que Dios siga poniendo gracia en ti .... Saludos desde Santiago de Chile ❤
2:10 pm in Cincinnati Ohio USA on 1/1/24! Very, very nice! Just like an oil fire on your stove! Water will make the fire worse! But in thos case its controlled! Genius! Thank you sir!
I wish u explained some of it. I'm new to ur channel. I find it interesting but would like more explanation as why it works and what ur doing as u do it.
I came across this and had to watch as I get great enjoyment from watching videos like these and to read some of the comments. I think it is so cool that you have made this. I would love to be able to make something like this but unfortunately I don't have the skill set. But I've always wanted to have a trade in all of these, carpentry, metal work, wielding, electrical and plumbing. I think the education system should make it compulsory for girls to take classes in all of these!
Firestarter I make. TSC Pine Shavings in a 55 gallon steel barrel and pour 5 gallons of free waste oil over bottom half of shavings and repeat at top. Great fire starter.
Very cool torch I don't have the means to weld anything but I might try to come up with some other way of doing this I think it wouldn't be a great way to start campfires without needing to find tinder or fatwood
No matter what you build or how you build it or what design you use you cannot get more BTUs out than BTU combustible, materials, supplied to the burn box.
I would advise not to refill while the stove is actively lit (ignited), your not taking consideration of the back pressure to a handle/refueling port. Sorry, but I think your modification ideas to this design are very dangerous.
Bro...its amazing...i like It... But I want to know if you can make a water-fired boiler power generator for households. Thank you and I can't wait to see the results 👍👍👍💪💪💪
you cant make electricity from gas or fire (they already are either electrically charged or produced by "electrical currents"). You will always need water to produce electricity because electricity is made from the friction of cold and heat currents that create the heat, fire, and gases. Fire is a consequence of the remaining hydrogen gases being burned off from friction. You should think in terms of how pressurized steam from boiling water can move propellars connected to an alternator, dc or ac motor (in order to produce electricity).
Below is a rocket stove that I designed and built several years ago. I can show you the design if your group is interested. Most important part is the fresh air that I've piped into the centre of the flame. You guys could also integrate the steam into this design.
i'm not really an outdoors-y kinda guy, but the first 30 secs where you're trying to light a log with a blow torch makes me wonder, do you live completely without kindling? XD
Pretty cool I’d probably put some type of safety valve in water tank just in case the tube ever got clogged. A unexpected hiss is better than an unexpected bang.