I love TH-cam and people like this. I love these little electric heaters they work great and I always wondered exactly what was inside. Now I know, thank you(-:
Looks like there is a short heating coil for the low setting (600 W) and a long one for the medium setting (900 W) then the two coils combined will be for the high setting (1,500 W). Interesting. This is better than to adjust current for heating setting. Love your work, by the way! Always want to take things apart since I was a kid to see how it works and try to reuse components. I have a box full of various sizes of screws, bolts.... just like yours but your parts are shinier.
Back in my early teens, I used to weld the oil-fins together. Two pieces have to be perfectly welded together with no holes in the welds. They have to be leak proof, and the welding has to have perfect penetration. Company I worked for back in those days (when I was younger),, made these type of cooling fins for this purpose, as well as for both hydro, and phone transformer cooling blades. Like this small set (seen here), they look the very same, except are larger in size to disperse, or give off lots of heat, to keep their transformers cool, while in operation. They are also all oil filled. Video brought back memories.
Kudos to you for telling the world to not throw things away needlessly. I have been trashpicking our dumpsters in our huge apartment complex for eight years. In that time, I have found about 5 to 10 oil heat heaters, including one last night. Wonder of wonders, with the possible exception of one I forgot to pick up later, every one of them worked! That includes the one I’m testing out right now, a DeLonghi model EW7507EBL. It heats up and it does not leak, but I cannot figure out the timer and the clock on it, which appear to be wonky. Perhaps that’s why it was thrown out. This is a wasteful shame as once I cleaned off the garbage goo, it heated up just fine with no leaks. I just now conducted the “tip over” test on it. It failed as it supposed to shut off automatically if tipped over. Perhaps that’s another reason why it was thrown out. But at least the wheels can all be pulled out so as to make it hard to tip over in the first place.
Most of the time it the over heat shutoff that has failed. You're not supposed to run them on the high settings. Use the 2 and 3 settings to heat up the radiator faster. The turn to low to maintain the room temperature with the thermostat set somewhere in the middle.
This is exactly what I needed. It's amazing how much info is on the internet now. I wanted to take apart an oil radiator, but wasn't sure exactly how that heating element was in there. I didn't want to force it just in case. My 24" adjustable wrench did the trick.
I was curious about what a heating element in one of these heaters looks like and you show it well. Thanks. I found only one photo of one before watching this. So the short one is the 600 watt and the longer one the 900, and they look very much like the elements in an electric water heater. I looked up the difference in diathermic (heat transfer) oil and lubricating oil. Diathermic oil has a high boiling point (3x that of water) and a low freezing point, and the oils have other various properties as well. Lubricating oil has to be a certain viscosity for what it's being used for, and also what kind of residue it leaves as it is pyrolized (combusted without oxygen), which isn't a factor in a closed system like an oil heater.
Loved this video. I've got an oil leak in one of mine and wondered best way to top up. Now I know. Thanks. Not sure if this was on purpose but you have an understated sense of humour that made me smile.
I have four 325 watt solar panels, each with about a 50 volt DC open circuit output. I think I'm going to do a series + parallel configuration and experiment with powering one of these at 70/80% of the design rating. Thanks for doing this. It looks like it should work fine. The heater's designed for AC, but I see no reason why it wouldn't work w/dc, since there isn't a transformer or switching PS anywhere.
I saw that taillight from the Mustang too.. I used to drive one, my first car. Did my own oil changes, tune ups, and brake jobs (on drum brakes) thanks to my dad being a mechanic 👍
I want to ask you this i have one , and it is very old but works very good and does not leak or rusty, i wonder how long can we use this oil filled heaters ?..how many years ?
Great video i have just brought a diesel heater and am going to get one of these broken down heaters to run the exorst through as half the heat is going outside. Do you know if the metal on those heaters are weldable? Cheers mate
I brought a long piece of exorst by its self for cheap off ebay im going to run that through 2 of those heaters seal it with a weld although be for it goes into heaters ill run it in a loop above heaters for saftey reasons get a couple of meters of that exorst hose and just plump it in the exorst first, if it still runs fine with all that extra exorst it wiil run fine once u put it through your oil heaters
I have an oil filled radiator similarly build. But instead of thick oil like yours it has water like liquid when I shake the heater. I wonder which one would be better to store heat, water or oil. I remember once I heated a pot of oil and it stayd untouchable hot like hour-two.
Thank you for this video because I have two of these things and the delivery companies won’t ship it back to the company unless you pay FREIGHT, and like you said Regulations say I can’t put it in the general trash or even bulk pickup. Hazardous waste will take the oil but not the container and metal scrap will take the body but not the oil. So now I can take these crappers apart and recover the oil and put in the big plastic jug and take it to hazardous waste.
I always wondered what was inside these things... Thanks for answering that question for me. I'm a little surprised at how much oil there was inside. I would have guessed it to be a LOT less than what you drained out. I was wrong... :-)
Our 82 year old friend died of dementia and we got his old heater (lots of signs of burning on it) that we had to dispose of. The metal recycle wouldn't take it due to the oil. I made a hazardous waste appointment with my city's trash. They wouldn't take it because of the oil. They said they take metal and they take oil but not together. So my husband and I took it apart and drained the oil. (He used one of his plumbing pipes to get off the knob.) I have emailed Delonghi to find out what kind of oil it is. They haven't gotten back yet. Some places say it is mineral oil. I've made another appointment for hazardous waste to dispose of the oil. We are going to take the emptied metal to the metal recycler. They may or may not take it according to someone on the phone. Geeze, I've had this thing for 8 months and it wasn't even ours, and it is so hard to get rid of it. If the metal recycler won't take it, I'm going to take it with the oil we got out of it and hope they take it all emptied out. Last resort would be to put soap and water in it and try to clean out the residual oil and hope someone will take it. But then I'll be dumping that in my yard. If it's mineral oil, maybe it won't be too bad.
@@lovewenwin It was diathermic oil. We took the heater to the metal recycler. I don't think they even looked that close at what it was. The hazardous waste took the oil. I labeled the old plastic bottles I put it in as diathermic oil. Glad that is all done now.
@@Sebastian-gj9tc In what kind of container? I think it isn't a pure substance that will not harm you in any way. I'd rather let the hazardous waste people deal with it.
"Diathermic Oil": These type of heaters use highly refined mineral oils, which evenly fill the outer fins of the radiator as the oil is heated, so even when the heater is turned off, the fins retain heat longer to transfer into the air.
You're the only one on TH-cam who actually did a whole disassembly and it was so useful to me to to figure how to open the heater unit but I still didn't find the reason for the oil smell that started to come off since Christmas. I'm afraid there's a leakage, what do you think?
I forgot about this comment until now, there was no leakage it was probably due to the sensor was faulty and it would work continuously till the oil is overheated, that may be the reason, it's a cheap on anyway it was a mistake to buy it.
It's copper wire, it's just tin coated. Hit it with a file and you'll see the copper color. Unfortunately it's all considered number two in the eyes of the buyer.
Homie I appreciate your video very much and I mean no offense when I say this whatsoever you're very intelligent person and I appreciate what you're doing here but all I can think is bubbles from trailer Park boys LOL
i scrap more to keep things out of the landfill, and my own curiosity. i take truck loads at a time ,so i don't break everything down , it is not worth scrapping just one thing. i would probably only get a few pennies for for the metal and maybe the same for the copper and brass, it depends on the scrap prices in your area.i haven't done a flat screen yet but i only scrap stuff i get for free thanks for watching ime hoping to do more scrapping vids but right now i'm in the middle of to many projects around the house and scrap is low right now
moste make some nois when heating and cooling it is from the expantion and contraction of the metal but if its exesave then i would send it back if you can
I want to replace the element with a DC water heater element from Missori wind and Solar. You can hook a solar panal directly to it with no charge controller. maybe a pwm switch They have a TH-cam channel.
Please can yu assist me my oil heater is no longer getting hot so I suspect that the oil is finished what can I dow please share me information my name is Joseph
You see something useful in everything you say. Me also. That is because you are a inventor, fabricator, your creative. And why pay for something when you can get it for free when someone throws it out..I can fix anything... ......but a woman!
I hope my husband doesnt see this... I would rather have 10 lamps with no cords than my space heaters with no cords... hahaha! Why do men think they need to splice cords all the time?😃😂😁😀
i'm looking at using Diathermic Oil like from these in a small heater unit and Wondered if Heating element was Directly in the oil, You've Answered my Question in This Video, Many Thanks Sir👍🙂 also good to see how much oil is in them
i make these for fun not for money and the more work i have to put into them the les fun it is. i truly am sorry if i can't cater to all but i am just having fun for me. i have worked on my mumbeling but its like a speech impediment sometimes it comes back
Bipin Singh, stay your dumb ass over in your 3rd world shit hole. This is M'erica asshole. We give know fucks about your crybaby comment... Dumb ass foreigners 😂 Great video brother, Always wondered about what was inside. 🇺🇸 2020
@@JunkworksGarage Theres nothing wrong with the way you talk bro lol, that dude was just some dumb ass half stepping dipshit who can barely speak english... And sounds like a libtard, the way he conducted his ungrateful whiney bitch ass comment
Dear junk work, I have nothing against you, your work or your spirit. I just want that these care taken by you will add value and better receptivity to your good work otherwise. Keep doing whatever you are doing, if possible improve. No need to take unnecessary pain if it takes away joy out of your work. My comment is only a feedback, which could help you better your work. Thanks.
Your like me, ive got wires with Connectors on and reuse them to save using new ones, i get a knife and release cable ties and reuse or cut off the end that goes through and reuse it on something smaller. No need to waste much at all
I love TH-cam and people like this. I love these little electric heaters they work great and I always wondered exactly what was inside. Now I know, thank you(-:
THANK YOU FOR WATCHING
Happy Thanksgiving
ToolTime
ATF maybe
Nah😁 carburetor cleaner
Looks like there is a short heating coil for the low setting (600 W) and a long one for the medium setting (900 W) then the two coils combined will be for the high setting (1,500 W). Interesting. This is better than to adjust current for heating setting. Love your work, by the way! Always want to take things apart since I was a kid to see how it works and try to reuse components. I have a box full of various sizes of screws, bolts.... just like yours but your parts are shinier.
Back in my early teens, I used to weld the oil-fins together. Two pieces have to be perfectly welded together with no holes in the welds. They have to be leak proof, and the welding has to have perfect penetration. Company I worked for back in those days (when I was younger),, made these type of cooling fins for this purpose, as well as for both hydro, and phone transformer cooling blades. Like this small set (seen here), they look the very same, except are larger in size to disperse, or give off lots of heat, to keep their transformers cool, while in operation. They are also all oil filled. Video brought back memories.
👍
Kudos to you for telling the world to not throw things away needlessly. I have been trashpicking our dumpsters in our huge apartment complex for eight years. In that time, I have found about 5 to 10 oil heat heaters, including one last night. Wonder of wonders, with the possible exception of one I forgot to pick up later, every one of them worked! That includes the one I’m testing out right now, a DeLonghi model EW7507EBL. It heats up and it does not leak, but I cannot figure out the timer and the clock on it, which appear to be wonky. Perhaps that’s why it was thrown out. This is a wasteful shame as once I cleaned off the garbage goo, it heated up just fine with no leaks. I just now conducted the “tip over” test on it. It failed as it supposed to shut off automatically if tipped over. Perhaps that’s another reason why it was thrown out. But at least the wheels can all be pulled out so as to make it hard to tip over in the first place.
Most of the time it the over heat shutoff that has failed. You're not supposed to run them on the high settings. Use the 2 and 3 settings to heat up the radiator faster. The turn to low to maintain the room temperature with the thermostat set somewhere in the middle.
I agree that everyone should recycle alot more and put less in the landfill.
Great video. :-)
This is exactly what I needed. It's amazing how much info is on the internet now. I wanted to take apart an oil radiator, but wasn't sure exactly how that heating element was in there. I didn't want to force it just in case. My 24" adjustable wrench did the trick.
👍
I was curious about what a heating element in one of these heaters looks like and you show it well. Thanks. I found only one photo of one before watching this. So the short one is the 600 watt and the longer one the 900, and they look very much like the elements in an electric water heater. I looked up the difference in diathermic (heat transfer) oil and lubricating oil. Diathermic oil has a high boiling point (3x that of water) and a low freezing point, and the oils have other various properties as well. Lubricating oil has to be a certain viscosity for what it's being used for, and also what kind of residue it leaves as it is pyrolized (combusted without oxygen), which isn't a factor in a closed system like an oil heater.
Thanks for the info 👍
Loved this video. I've got an oil leak in one of mine and wondered best way to top up. Now I know. Thanks. Not sure if this was on purpose but you have an understated sense of humour that made me smile.
"I smell things I probably shouldn't"
I have four 325 watt solar panels, each with about a 50 volt DC open circuit output. I think I'm going to do a series + parallel configuration and experiment with powering one of these at 70/80% of the design rating. Thanks for doing this. It looks like it should work fine. The heater's designed for AC, but I see no reason why it wouldn't work w/dc, since there isn't a transformer or switching PS anywhere.
Very informative video. Good to hear you're spreading the word about recycling.
+David Gilmour thank for watching
@@JunkworksGaragedo they need to be drained of the oil to be scrapped? I would assume they do. ❤
@@DB-jd9ht I would think so but it probably depends on the scrap yard
I saw that taillight from the Mustang too.. I used to drive one, my first car. Did my own oil changes, tune ups, and brake jobs (on drum brakes) thanks to my dad being a mechanic 👍
love those kinds of stories ime working on getting it going but it's a slow process
LOVE this little Heater! So far so Good!
So these oil radiators act similar to a lava lamp on the inside. Cool, I wondered how they worked.
It's a form of silicone oil. I used to make them in a factory.
thanks appreciate it
i heard it was mineral oil.
I want to ask you this i have one , and it is very old but works very good and does not leak or rusty, i wonder how long can we use this oil filled heaters ?..how many years ?
@@palangnar3588 for as long as the element works. the switches burn up, but i just bypass that
Great video i have just brought a diesel heater and am going to get one of these broken down heaters to run the exorst through as half the heat is going outside. Do you know if the metal on those heaters are weldable? Cheers mate
there steel but im not sure if they coat them with anythig that could interfear with welding .
Did you do it ? I have both and was thinking about doin the same
No havent done it yet mybee get back to me in 8 months as we r going into summer now
@@michaelroberts6299 shit man we are goin into winter now lol
I brought a long piece of exorst by its self for cheap off ebay im going to run that through 2 of those heaters seal it with a weld although be for it goes into heaters ill run it in a loop above heaters for saftey reasons get a couple of meters of that exorst hose and just plump it in the exorst first, if it still runs fine with all that extra exorst it wiil run fine once u put it through your oil heaters
I understand the strugle of finding things that "could have a use later"... I feel ya.😆
You guys take shit apart, so I don’t have to. BRAVO
I have an oil filled radiator similarly build. But instead of thick oil like yours it has water like liquid when I shake the heater. I wonder which one would be better to store heat, water or oil. I remember once I heated a pot of oil and it stayd untouchable hot like hour-two.
mineral oil, thats why these are safe heaters cause the oil does not interfere with any electrical components (people made computers in mineral oil)
Hi, the oil fumes make me I'll. Can I drain the oil and fill with water?
@@josepe2448 no, water evaporates to gas an expands, itll turn into a small pressure bomb
@@Wildboy789789 they used to sell portable water radiators. I need one. The oil gives off fumes and makes me feel sick.
Thank you for this video because I have two of these things and the delivery companies won’t ship it back to the company unless you pay FREIGHT, and like you said Regulations say I can’t put it in the general trash or even bulk pickup. Hazardous waste will take the oil but not the container and metal scrap will take the body but not the oil. So now I can take these crappers apart and recover the oil and put in the big plastic jug and take it to hazardous waste.
👍
I always wondered what was inside these things... Thanks for answering that question for me. I'm a little surprised at how much oil there was inside. I would have guessed it to be a LOT less than what you drained out. I was wrong... :-)
👍
Our 82 year old friend died of dementia and we got his old heater (lots of signs of burning on it) that we had to dispose of. The metal recycle wouldn't take it due to the oil. I made a hazardous waste appointment with my city's trash. They wouldn't take it because of the oil. They said they take metal and they take oil but not together. So my husband and I took it apart and drained the oil. (He used one of his plumbing pipes to get off the knob.) I have emailed Delonghi to find out what kind of oil it is. They haven't gotten back yet. Some places say it is mineral oil. I've made another appointment for hazardous waste to dispose of the oil. We are going to take the emptied metal to the metal recycler. They may or may not take it according to someone on the phone. Geeze, I've had this thing for 8 months and it wasn't even ours, and it is so hard to get rid of it. If the metal recycler won't take it, I'm going to take it with the oil we got out of it and hope they take it all emptied out. Last resort would be to put soap and water in it and try to clean out the residual oil and hope someone will take it. But then I'll be dumping that in my yard. If it's mineral oil, maybe it won't be too bad.
Any updates?
@@lovewenwin It was diathermic oil. We took the heater to the metal recycler. I don't think they even looked that close at what it was. The hazardous waste took the oil. I labeled the old plastic bottles I put it in as diathermic oil. Glad that is all done now.
Why not just burn the oil
@@Sebastian-gj9tc In what kind of container? I think it isn't a pure substance that will not harm you in any way. I'd rather let the hazardous waste people deal with it.
"Diathermic Oil": These type of heaters use highly refined mineral oils, which evenly fill the outer fins of the radiator as the oil is heated, so even when the heater is turned off, the fins retain heat longer to transfer into the air.
You're the only one on TH-cam who actually did a whole disassembly and it was so useful to me to to figure how to open the heater unit but I still didn't find the reason for the oil smell that started to come off since Christmas. I'm afraid there's a leakage, what do you think?
i would stop using it the fire danger is not worth it
I forgot about this comment until now, there was no leakage it was probably due to the sensor was faulty and it would work continuously till the oil is overheated, that may be the reason, it's a cheap on anyway it was a mistake to buy it.
Nice! curiosity crossed off the list. i Like, OLE!
Thank you Sam for showing us.
THANK YOU FOR WATCHING
Right on ! So happy to hear so ome else tell people not to throw this stuff in the landfill .
👍
Can't wait to see your video when you restore your Mustang! :-)
im hoping life will quit getting in the way so i can get to it
its mineral oil?
Was thinking a copper pipe inside capped. And use a propane burner to heat it up?
Thx, i was curious.
Its mineral oil. Its safe
I do this exact same thing with any small appliance that stops working, have for years! I live that I'm not the only one!
👍
It's copper wire, it's just tin coated. Hit it with a file and you'll see the copper color. Unfortunately it's all considered number two in the eyes of the buyer.
thanks appreciate the info
II have a question. what is the thread diameter in the heating element
not sure and i scrapped it long ago
Thanks, loved the video.
Hello, the oil fumes make me I'll. Can I drain the oil and replace with water?
not positive but i wouldn't
Sir isle Slimer oil Kitna Hona Chahiye
How much of oil in 11fin oil heater
dont know
What type of oil is used in the heater?
not sure
Great Video
I always wonder whats inside lol
Informative
Thanks
thank you
Is that the tail light of a '72 Olds Cutlass in the background?
+Ddanactive nope its a 65 mustang hopefully i will be making vids on it soon
Kudos cause you look beyond the video even though you got it wrong. OLE!
Is it possible to turn this heater to cooling system by transfering the tank of oil to a gas tank ?Does that really work or it's a bomb?
i don't know but i wouldn't try
Kon si ccampni Ka achha Hota hai
Is it ok if I stored it on its side or should I keep it vertical?
i would keep it vertical but if it has been sideways than i would let it set up for a while and it probably will be ok
Engine oil?
NO
Homie I appreciate your video very much and I mean no offense when I say this whatsoever you're very intelligent person and I appreciate what you're doing here but all I can think is bubbles from trailer Park boys LOL
never seen it but back when i made this i got a lot of comments saying i mumbled too much, i have since got a new camera and the audio is better 👍
hi good video do u have any of flat screen tvs ,how much can u make from scrapping this heater ?
i scrap more to keep things out of the landfill, and my own curiosity. i take truck loads at a time ,so i don't break everything down , it is not worth scrapping just one thing. i would probably only get a few pennies for for the metal and maybe the same for the copper and brass, it depends on the scrap prices in your area.i haven't done a flat screen yet but i only scrap stuff i get for free thanks for watching ime hoping to do more scrapping vids but right now i'm in the middle of to many projects around the house and scrap is low right now
i do the same t as you to keep things out of landfill
good to hear every little bit anyone can do helps
its enjoying doing it
Oil name please
i don't know sorry
my radiator makes noise when it starts to heat is from gorenje company what can i do
moste make some nois when heating and cooling it is from the expantion and contraction of the metal but if its exesave then i would send it back if you can
Thanks dude, I just had one of these break. Gonna break it down now and recycle it.
hope this helped thanks for watching
Junk works DIY Garage is that hoffman brand? cuz i have one and the light turns on but no heat please help?
i'm not sure what brand it was but it is probably your heating coil that went bad
Great video now I know.
Thanks dawg
The oil is silicone oil.....non flammable and food grade usually
thanks appreciate the info
Silicon and food grade don’t really go together.
I want to replace the element with a DC water heater element from Missori wind and Solar. You can hook a solar panal directly to it with no charge controller. maybe a pwm switch They have a TH-cam channel.
good idea
Please can yu assist me my oil heater is no longer getting hot so I suspect that the oil is finished what can I dow please share me information my name is Joseph
The oil in theas dont go bad so you probably have a bad heater element
You see something useful in everything you say. Me also. That is because you are a inventor, fabricator, your creative. And why pay for something when you can get it for free when someone throws it out..I can fix anything... ......but a woman!
Who told you they use cooking oil? Your green grocer? They use mineral oil or silicon oil. Veg oil would break down.
An oil heater has heated from below and from the Supreme cool Osman What a bummer Is a shortage of oil?
Mine bust open and all the oil came out and nearly set fire this morning. I now have no heater and have to get a new carpet!
sorry to hear
SONOFA!! I need that lower switch!!!
nice video
👍
I hope my husband doesnt see this... I would rather have 10 lamps with no cords than my space heaters with no cords... hahaha! Why do men think they need to splice cords all the time?😃😂😁😀
You husband is married man and he doesnt cheat on you.
Good video ..i was wondering what kind of oil...now i fo mine
POLLARDMANIA thanks for watching
i'm looking at using Diathermic Oil like from these in a small heater unit and Wondered if Heating element was Directly in the oil, You've Answered my Question in This Video, Many Thanks Sir👍🙂 also good to see how much oil is in them
👍
Your a Jack of all but master of making money from scrap! Just felt I needed to correct you there lol 👍
Thanks!
👍
Thank You I Want to use it as a 12 volt heaters.
👍
I recycle metal and cook plastics, rubber and oil into diesel fuel.
👍
What does he say? And yes Volume Is all the way up.
that's aluminum wire
Alezandro Zepeda no that’s not. That’s copper coated in tin.
That poor mustang
I like ur mustang
hope to get back on that soon
@@JunkworksGarage i have a 65 myself
i just bought a new heater they are so dam thin im pissed off
Thats copper wire with solder tinned over end
thanks
Cooking oil 😂😂 are you serious. Deep fry you some chicken and tell me how it tastes 😅
Tinned copper wire.
Your wrench is called a ford wrench
thanks did it come with a ford tool kit or does it have anything to do with ford automobiles
@@JunkworksGarage I really have no idea why it is called a ford wrench.
Pl. Speak clearly. Make diagrams. Write subtitles on the screen. Videos are watched all over the world. Good clear accent is necessary.
i make these for fun not for money and the more work i have to put into them the les fun it is. i truly am sorry if i can't cater to all but i am just having fun for me. i have worked on my mumbeling but its like a speech impediment sometimes it comes back
Bipin Singh, stay your dumb ass over in your 3rd world shit hole. This is M'erica asshole. We give know fucks about your crybaby comment... Dumb ass foreigners 😂
Great video brother, Always wondered about what was inside.
🇺🇸 2020
@@JunkworksGarage Theres nothing wrong with the way you talk bro lol, that dude was just some dumb ass half stepping dipshit who can barely speak english... And sounds like a libtard, the way he conducted his ungrateful whiney bitch ass comment
Dear junk work, I have nothing against you, your work or your spirit. I just want that these care taken by you will add value and better receptivity to your good work otherwise. Keep doing whatever you are doing, if possible improve. No need to take unnecessary pain if it takes away joy out of your work. My comment is only a feedback, which could help you better your work. Thanks.
@@BipinSingh-ku1kw Liberal sack of shit... Oh fuck grammer police
tin covered copper wire
thanks
Mumble , mumble , doodly squat 'n mumble !
Sorry I just don't speak mumble .
I need a translator and another guy to help me fix my heater
thank for watching
Your like me, ive got wires with Connectors on and reuse them to save using new ones, i get a knife and release cable ties and reuse or cut off the end that goes through and reuse it on something smaller. No need to waste much at all
I will DISECT😆
mineral oil
I wooowwowo wowow saying?
+Michael McNeil uhuhuh thanks
What does he say? And yes Volume Is all the way up.