fantastic restoration of an old gem. 👍👍👍 I'm kinda surprised you don't have the subscriber count that this channel deserves... Looking forward to watching more of your vids.
@@AJRestoration This Kerosene stove of World War ll time gives sharp Flame ,appears to be Air Pressure Fire Flame but there is no air filling pump anywhere attached with its Container other than Kerosene filling Brass lid. It should be here explained as to how Flame comes out like Gas cylinder ?
@@abdulrahimkhan5714 I can explain with the permission of the owner of the video. The kerosene builds up presuure when is heated flowing through the two loops in the burner (You know a fluid in a sealed container builds pressure when is heated ) Dont know if i expalined myself well...maybe some terms are wrong because english is not my first language. Thanks
A beautiful restoration of a very simple stove. Good job, and thanks for sharing it. This stove looks like it is built upon the same lines as those little home made alcohol stoves you can find instructions for everywhere on TH-cam, only with a metal body not a glass jar. The wick draws the fuel up to the top of the coil where the flame from the spirit cup heats it until it flashes into vapour, which causes it to become pressurized. The vapour then pushes out the hole at the bottom of the coil and it burns like any pressure flame does. Of course the wicks can't stop the pressure from also going down into the reservoir tank (the pressure, NOT the flame) so the tank needs to be sealed, or else the flame dies out, which is why opening the filler lid just enough to relieve the pressure makes it go out. A good tinkerer could build one of these in a shop. It's amazingly simple, I just never realized it would work with kerosene, lol.
Great Job Thank You. We used that copper no-seize paste at work it's fantastic stuff, you go back on a job 5yrs. Later once you Crack a bolt or nut they will walk right off from having used the paste before.
We actually tested a few liquids and got the best results with kerosene as opposed to gasoline and alcohol. But apparently it is supposed to be used with gasoline.
Can you please indicate the hole from where the kerosene vapour coming out. In my village we still use kerosene stove but this stove amazes me with its fuel efficiency.
Oh wow you had me holding my breath when you were sand blasting those parts lol 😂 white jewelers polishing rouge gave it a great shine! I know some say leave the patina to appreciate its age (beauty) & value for nostalgia but I went old school cleaning/ polishing mine with Barkeepers Friend not having the fancy equipments. Nice job!
AJ Restorations Yep it looks like you know what you’re doing & lots of experience. I can’t believe that one guys comment saying where’s the restoration? lol 😂
Same here. I saw him firing up the ol' sandblaster and was wondering what he was about to do with that damn thing AND then he went and turned on the bench grinder and I was HOPING he wasn't going to take brass to a wire wheel...
AJ Restorations That’s true, the one in my old SVEA 123R (3months ago purchase) is old, looks original & in perfect condition! They were ahead of their time I’m thinking on the size & weight (1lb) back then for camping & hiking. My family yearly vacations were to travel but one year we went camping, between that & occasional outings to cook outdoors my dad dragged that Coleman 2 burner stove around which worked for the family of 5 so I bought one years later yet never used it so the solo version you or I have is perfect for my needs. 4 ounces of fuel goes a long ways for cooking correct?
The weak part of coil-type stoves is burner jet hole. When it cleaned with the "pricker", it became wider with time. In normal stoves you can replace jet in the burner, but not in this stove.
The tube is 3cm/1.1" in diameter. The stove is 10cm/3" tall. The stove's copper base is 5cm/1.9" The copper base is 9cm/3.5" in diameter The stove cage or housing is 12cm/4.7" wide and 13cm/5" tall.
There are two camps here, those who say polish to an as new finish and those who say leave the patina alone. I am in the latter. In my opinion an antique item that has been "growing" a beautiful patina fo 80 years deserves to be left alone. Sure, repair what needs to be repaired to get it working but hold back on the cleaning. Any way that's my opinion. For those who like a shiny new look, good job done here.
мужик норм пацан , керосинку помыл ) это то же самое что помыть машину и она работать лучше станет , за то сколько химии потратил и кривых рук , тупо не разбирая щетку на болгарку и все норм
I have built a few of these but always used alcohol. Are you saying kerosene works in these as well? The little dish filled with fuel to heat up the copper coil is just like a kerosene lantern that has to be preheated. I have changed a coleman white gas fuel lantern to burn kerosene which means I had to also add a retaining fuel cup. Lord be with you.
Hey A.J., question, would you happen to have any stickers for your channel? If so, could I have a couple to put on my toolbox? I collect them from my favorite restorers.
Thank you. The hole is on the underside of the upper part of the coil. We do not know the manufacturer of the stove, there aren't any identifiable markings on the stove to try and trace origin.
The powder coating has a better finish, the parts keep moisture and when you preheat the parts you take the moisture out. Powder Coating does not like moisture when it is curing in the oven.
Hello and thanks for the video :) Never seen one of those. What is the principle of work of this stove. I can understand that kerosene gets hot and starts to burn like in jet-engine, but where is/are the nozzle(s)?
Look at 14:35 in this video. There is a very very small hole in the copper tubing. The copper heats up thus evaporating the alcohol which is replenished in the copper piping via "capillary attraction" by way of a "wick" which is 100% cotton and is in the tubing and out of the tubing into the liquid fuel. This is an alcohol stove. I have never seen kerosene run from a stove like this. I will this with kerosene as well.
Not sure about melting lead for bullets, by Second Word War most would be using factory made ammunition. It is possible someone was hand loading for the fun and to save money but I'd find it entirely more likely they were using it to make a cup of tea while out in the bush. But still a very practical little stove and next restoration, the roof of your workshop? (9.54min)
Thank you for the info and comment. What you see there is the outside of the workshop. Things have changed over time and it is much tidier outside now.😀😀😀
I agree with John, unless they were using muskets from 100 years prior, there's a lot more than melting lead that goes into reloading. Second. Every firearm by 1910, fired much to fast to shoot lead bullets, they were commonly copper coated, some were steel core. (Russian 7.62x54R)(1893)
Wait a minute, you mean to tell me that you can run kerosene in what I have always seen as an alcohol stove? Did it have any smell using kerosene, and what is the burn time using kerosene versus using alcohol
@Chandrasekar Govindasamy @Reza Asadi I believe the nozzle he’s referring to is the pin point holes in the copper coil. Preheating the pan under the coils build up pressure in the tank then the fuel sucks up the wicks into the coil igniting those “nozzles” weeping the fuel building up more pressure & that’s the roaring jet sound that you hear when it’s 🔥 burning.
I don't think you can use that process on brass, I had a good result with brasso and cotton. What also works good is coarse salt with a little bit of lemon juice, scrub it in and wipe it off, just sometimes if you scrub too hard it can scratch the brass. So if you are sentimental about the brass item, its better so stick to brasso.
It is originally gasoline, but I have tested all 3 fuels and all 3 seemed to work great, kerosene burned the longest, gasoline and alcohol burned the hottest.
The heat makes pressure inside the body, and it becomes pressurized and kerosene vapour is forced out the small hole in the coil, that ignites due to the flame already present!
There is a wick inside the copper pipe, the wick sucks up the fuel and the flame on the outside heats up the fuel creating a vapor. The vapor then becomes pressurised and escapes at the only hole that is open and that is then ignited by the external flame and starts a cycle that keeps the coil warm and pressurised.
glass is not exactly he best medium to boil water in... try aluminium, copper or steel. in that order... and the result will be rather different from glass. personally I would love to own a stove like that, replica or not :) gotta admit there are more efficient and faster stoves. but I love historical items like this..
Olden days' technology is evergreen nothing is equal to this bro still it is working amazing 👌 please let me know about the burner and Wicks how it works
There is a wick inside the copper pipe, the wick sucks up the fuel and the flame on the outside heats up the fuel creating a vapor. The vapor then becomes pressurised and escapes at the only hole that is open and that is then ignited by the external flame and starts a cycle that keeps the coil warm and pressurised.
You are almost correct, at first I thought it was a paraffin stove, but paraffin stoves don't come with a wick and you usually have to pressurise the paraffin stove variant. This one turned out to be a petrol stove, but alcohol would also work, and as we see in my video, paraffin also worked but not as good as it would with alcohol or petrol. I think this kind of stove is awesome since it works with all three fuels. Makes it a great shtf survival item.
@@AJRestoration As you see, it perfectly runs on paraffine. Petrol-only stoves can't work on paraffine: their jet holes are wider so paraffin will burn with brightly-yellow flame with smoke and soot. Also, pressure release with fuel cap is extremely dangerous with petrol/gas (but can be used with paraffin). You will blow the flame off and after this open the fuel cap.
fantastic restoration of an old gem. 👍👍👍 I'm kinda surprised you don't have the subscriber count that this channel deserves... Looking forward to watching more of your vids.
Thank you very much! I hope to soon rack up the subs!
Fanstastik
مم
@@AJRestoration This Kerosene stove of World War ll time gives sharp Flame ,appears to be Air Pressure Fire Flame but there is no air filling pump anywhere attached with its Container other than Kerosene filling Brass lid. It should be here explained as to how Flame comes out like Gas cylinder ?
@@abdulrahimkhan5714 I can explain with the permission of the owner of the video. The kerosene builds up presuure when is heated flowing through the two loops in the burner (You know a fluid in a sealed container builds pressure when is heated ) Dont know if i expalined myself well...maybe some terms are wrong because english is not my first language. Thanks
A beautiful restoration of a very simple stove. Good job, and thanks for sharing it.
This stove looks like it is built upon the same lines as those little home made alcohol stoves you can find instructions for everywhere on TH-cam, only with a metal body not a glass jar. The wick draws the fuel up to the top of the coil where the flame from the spirit cup heats it until it flashes into vapour, which causes it to become pressurized. The vapour then pushes out the hole at the bottom of the coil and it burns like any pressure flame does. Of course the wicks can't stop the pressure from also going down into the reservoir tank (the pressure, NOT the flame) so the tank needs to be sealed, or else the flame dies out, which is why opening the filler lid just enough to relieve the pressure makes it go out. A good tinkerer could build one of these in a shop. It's amazingly simple, I just never realized it would work with kerosene, lol.
That is the best explanation of the burning process I have read by far! Thank you!
These coil stoves were invented more then 100 years ago. And they were kero or gas stoves for next 50 years.
Same here, interesting that it works so well with paraffin/kerosene, yes; ethanol is what I've seen other DIY ones run on too.
I have old ways.
Good job
I love the sound of rain on a metal roof.
Nicely done restoration.
Never seen one of those stoves before , amazing how it works.Thanks
OLD IS GOLD
Nice Restoration Work
Thank you very much
Very nice! Good Job!
Thank you! Cheers!
Superb people like you inspire like minded people to save and restore item that would just get thrown. Keep it up
That's the plan! Thank you! 😊
Nice restoration! The trick with using unscrewing tap and steel wool is a gem!
Thanks! 👍
I just wonder how to Polish the inside of the Canister and replacing the wick material.
Steel wool on the easy out is genius! Thanks for that tip👏
The best demonstration how primus works without Venturi effect. Venturi must have to high energy.
Not a primus... primus uses pressure pump.....
Great Job Thank You. We used that copper no-seize paste at work it's fantastic stuff, you go back on a job 5yrs. Later once you Crack a bolt or nut they will walk right off from having used the paste before.
Thanks for the info!
Good work, I never saw one without a pump, and it works well. I want one.
I love it!
Make one. Tons of videos.
the patina was beautiful.
It was quite interesting.
Superb stove
Thank you
Great. You are the best guy.
so beautiful. thank you very much.
WOW I’ve never seen anything like that kind of stove before, very interesting the way it works, great restoration, bravo👍
Glad you enjoyed it, stay tuned for more!
"just imagine rocket sounds" lol, great restoration my friend.
Haha thank you buddy! 😀
Awesome restoration. Liked the technology used during WW2 time to light a kerosene stove . Keep it coming
I have another kerosene stove coming up soon.
Like this restoration work
Thank you very much.
Great restoration job mate. I love the stove and the way it works. I’m a sucker for brass items. Love polishing them up. 👍🇦🇺
There really is something about polished brass and copper that gets me exited! Thank you for the compliments! I really appreciate your time!
Que belleza de estufa maravillosa restauracion
Great job. A bit peculiar with a kerosene stove that works without pump. I only thought it was possible with gasoline stoves/torches.
We actually tested a few liquids and got the best results with kerosene as opposed to gasoline and alcohol. But apparently it is supposed to be used with gasoline.
Superb technology I never seen this type of stove old is really gold ❤️❤️❤️
Thanks for watching. Look out for our next video launching soon.
@@AJRestoration I'm waiting 🐰
9:05 Here in California, that is the most beautiful sound.
I could listen to that all day long!
Really Good job
Thank you NORA KHALID
!
Bu mükemmel buluşların zamana yenik düşmesine izin vermemeniz takdir edici . İyi iş çıkardınız 👍👍👍👏👏👏👏
Nazik yorumunuz ve izlediğiniz için çok teşekkür ederim
Beauty of Art thank you very much
Thank you so much!
Really old gem ❤
Thank you.
Highly advanced technique, durable too beyond imagination.👌🙏💌
Thanks a lot 😊
Can you please indicate the hole from where the kerosene vapour coming out. In my village we still use kerosene stove but this stove amazes me with its fuel efficiency.
I never seen before like this stove...it's marvelous..can you make another like this....
Check out our latest video! Its quite similar.
Butyful work i love it
Thank you very much! We are glad you enjoyed the video.
Oh wow you had me holding my breath when you were sand blasting those parts lol 😂 white jewelers polishing rouge gave it a great shine! I know some say leave the patina to appreciate its age (beauty) & value for nostalgia but I went old school cleaning/ polishing mine with Barkeepers Friend not having the fancy equipments. Nice job!
Glad you enjoyed it. Our fine sandblasting media and low pressure compressor ensure not much material is removed.
AJ Restorations
Yep it looks like you know what you’re doing & lots of experience. I can’t believe that one guys comment saying where’s the restoration? lol 😂
Same here. I saw him firing up the ol' sandblaster and was wondering what he was about to do with that damn thing AND then he went and turned on the bench grinder and I was HOPING he wasn't going to take brass to a wire wheel...
I'm still scratching my head as to how this thing actually works.
These are great “non moving parts” stoves & easy to use with basically nothing to wear out (exception wick) even the wick should last for years?!
The wick is rather durable.
AJ Restorations
That’s true, the one in my old SVEA 123R (3months ago purchase) is old, looks original & in perfect condition! They were ahead of their time I’m thinking on the size & weight (1lb) back then for camping & hiking. My family yearly vacations were to travel but one year we went camping, between that & occasional outings to cook outdoors my dad dragged that Coleman 2 burner stove around which worked for the family of 5 so I bought one years later yet never used it so the solo version you or I have is perfect for my needs. 4 ounces of fuel goes a long ways for cooking correct?
The weak part of coil-type stoves is burner jet hole. When it cleaned with the "pricker", it became wider with time. In normal stoves you can replace jet in the burner, but not in this stove.
Nunca vi una cosina así.. Por donde sale el gas?? 🤔 Como funciona esa cosinita? 🤔
What was that coating you baked onto the black parts?
So nice 😍
Thank you! Cheers!
Superb 👍🌹
Many many thanks
Great restoration! I just love vintage items. Keep it up!
Thank you so much! Stay tuned, there is more to come!
I got a stesco , stove, going to test it on kerro
Great job love watching videos 😃
De que material é feito o barbante que está no interior da cerpentina do fogareiro?. Grato.
Very beautifull
Thank you sridhar! Cheers!
How the heck does the kerosene get out of the pipes and catch fire? Are theyre little holes i couldnt see?
I wonder, does that copper roller have holes where the kerosene comes out?
There is a small hole yes.
lindo trabalho
It looks like you loosened the cap to extinguish the flame. How does that work?
One good question, the small ”wires” that come out next to the wicks. Are they actually wires? Or small TUBES?
I think that is the wire they used to pull the wick through the tube.
Not your most sophisticated restoration but you did an excellent job. Keep up the good work
How tall and wide is it, and what diameter is the copper tube from your beautyfull cooker ?
The tube is 3cm/1.1" in diameter.
The stove is 10cm/3" tall.
The stove's copper base is 5cm/1.9"
The copper base is 9cm/3.5" in diameter
The stove cage or housing is 12cm/4.7" wide and 13cm/5" tall.
@@AJRestoration Thank you for your answer, and how big is the tube in mm ?
it's so cool to see you don't use chemicals to restore
There are two camps here, those who say polish to an as new finish and those who say leave the patina alone. I am in the latter. In my opinion an antique item that has been "growing" a beautiful patina fo 80 years deserves to be left alone. Sure, repair what needs to be repaired to get it working but hold back on the cleaning. Any way that's my opinion. For those who like a shiny new look, good job done here.
Thank you, Sir! I like both so I am happy and so is the customer. Win-Win.
My greetings and a hug from Venezuela, congratulations what a good job... 👍
Thank you Franklin! I appreciate!
Great vid. HTF does the stove work without a pump???
Огонь супер!
И наверное очень экономичный агрегат!
Это тоже круто звучит.
мужик норм пацан , керосинку помыл ) это то же самое что помыть машину и она работать лучше станет , за то сколько химии потратил и кривых рук , тупо не разбирая щетку на болгарку и все норм
Great restoration. I am not sure I understand how the burner works though.
Thank you
Looks like a motagnino Italian ww2 camp stove...idk for sure tho
I have built a few of these but always used alcohol.
Are you saying kerosene works in these as well?
The little dish filled with fuel to heat up the copper coil is just like a kerosene lantern that has to be preheated.
I have changed a coleman white gas fuel lantern to burn kerosene which means I had to also add a retaining fuel cup.
Lord be with you.
It's very much like the Vintage Handy camper's Stove.
Bhai isme upar flame kaha se aaya.oil ya spirit upar kaha se aaya jo jalta h.
theek theek. dekhane ke lie dhanyavaad.
КЛАССНАЯ РАБОТА 👍👍👍
Спасибо, добрый сэр! 👍
Hey A.J., question, would you happen to have any stickers for your channel? If so, could I have a couple to put on my toolbox? I collect them from my favorite restorers.
Hi, really enjoyed your restoration job. What product did you use at 1:11? Thanks.
Thank you, I used Q20, but its the same as WD40
@@AJRestoration thank you very much.
Huge respect for u sir
More lov from india
Thank you so much.
This is really nice. No air pressure required. Where are the holes in the round circular burner? Underside? What make is it? German? Swedish?
Thank you. The hole is on the underside of the upper part of the coil. We do not know the manufacturer of the stove, there aren't any identifiable markings on the stove to try and trace origin.
Simple , but good and long last
Where do you get methylated spirits?
I got mine from a local hardware shop.
Why did you heat the parts before you painted them?
The powder coating has a better finish, the parts keep moisture and when you preheat the parts you take the moisture out. Powder Coating does not like moisture when it is curing in the oven.
Hello and thanks for the video :) Never seen one of those. What is the principle of work of this stove. I can understand that kerosene gets hot and starts to burn like in jet-engine, but where is/are the nozzle(s)?
Look at 14:35 in this video. There is a very very small hole in the copper tubing. The copper heats up thus evaporating the alcohol which is replenished in the copper piping via "capillary attraction" by way of a "wick" which is 100% cotton and is in the tubing and out of the tubing into the liquid fuel. This is an alcohol stove. I have never seen kerosene run from a stove like this. I will this with kerosene as well.
Me gustaba mas con la pàtina antigua. Me parece demasiado duros los metodos de la proyeccion de arena para un articulo tan delicado. En fin...
9:04 - raining on a metal roof?
You are correct sir!
What is the nozzle diameter?
👍👍👍♥️🇩🇿 tré bien
Not sure about melting lead for bullets, by Second Word War most would be using factory made ammunition. It is possible someone was hand loading for the fun and to save money but I'd find it entirely more likely they were using it to make a cup of tea while out in the bush. But still a very practical little stove and next restoration, the roof of your workshop? (9.54min)
Thank you for the info and comment. What you see there is the outside of the workshop. Things have changed over time and it is much tidier outside now.😀😀😀
I agree with John, unless they were using muskets from 100 years prior, there's a lot more than melting lead that goes into reloading. Second. Every firearm by 1910, fired much to fast to shoot lead bullets, they were commonly copper coated, some were steel core. (Russian 7.62x54R)(1893)
can it run on petroleum??
Yes it can :-)
I don't see the pump?
Wait a minute, you mean to tell me that you can run kerosene in what I have always seen as an alcohol stove? Did it have any smell using kerosene, and what is the burn time using kerosene versus using alcohol
I liked it better with all the patina
Хозяйственная женщина. Примус смогла помыть
Love it from Indian kashmir
Thank you very much
good work, brass is one of the few metals where it is O.K. to polish the item, (maybe because it really doesn't give a good patina) very nice work.
Well said!
What kind of sandblasting media are you using? This is important for me to know please
I am using a fine silica sand for saldblasting
@@AJRestoration thank you. I am using this also.
From where this air mixed kerosene (aerosol) come as fuel
The air mixes with the kerosene vapor as soon as it exits the nozzle.
Where is nozzle ? where is the
location that nozzle is installed ?
@@rezaasadi2114 that's what the answer we want to know
@Chandrasekar Govindasamy
@Reza Asadi
I believe the nozzle he’s referring to is the pin point holes in the copper coil. Preheating the pan under the coils build up pressure in the tank then the fuel sucks up the wicks into the coil igniting those “nozzles” weeping the fuel building up more pressure & that’s the roaring jet sound that you hear when it’s 🔥 burning.
@@IAMGWH1 yes it is .
Вопрос - как гасится такая горелка????
Just watched your electrosis (sp?). Can you do the same to brass?
I don't think you can use that process on brass, I had a good result with brasso and cotton. What also works good is coarse salt with a little bit of lemon juice, scrub it in and wipe it off, just sometimes if you scrub too hard it can scratch the brass. So if you are sentimental about the brass item, its better so stick to brasso.
is it kerosine ( diesel) ore gasoline ??
It is originally gasoline, but I have tested all 3 fuels and all 3 seemed to work great, kerosene burned the longest, gasoline and alcohol burned the hottest.
@@AJRestoration Thank you
is it without air pump?
The heat makes pressure inside the body, and it becomes pressurized and kerosene vapour is forced out the small hole in the coil, that ignites due to the flame already present!
@@AJRestoration thanks
How does it works?
There is a wick inside the copper pipe, the wick sucks up the fuel and the flame on the outside heats up the fuel creating a vapor. The vapor then becomes pressurised and escapes at the only hole that is open and that is then ignited by the external flame and starts a cycle that keeps the coil warm and pressurised.
From where the flame came out
From the coil.
Since glass is an insulator that water probably would've boiled a little bit faster in a metal pot. Just wouldn't have looked as cool....
It took FOREVER to boil! But it looked good >.
@@AJRestoration Yes it did.
glass is not exactly he best medium to boil water in... try aluminium, copper or steel. in that order... and the result will be rather different from glass. personally I would love to own a stove like that, replica or not :) gotta admit there are more efficient and faster stoves. but I love historical items like this..
Yes, you are right I used the glass because I thought it would look nice!
It was "cool" ...! 🇧🇷💙💙💙
Thank you!!
No pumping! Interesting.
Repair to kiya magar kerosin milta kahan? Isse to bhangar me bechta to ek bar ka khana to milta?
mujhe ek sthaaneey haardaveyar kee dukaan se kerosin mila.
All it takes is a little patience (12 minutes) and you have a nice cup of coffee or tea...
If I could, I would make you a kickass cup of tea!
Olden days' technology is evergreen nothing is equal to this bro still it is working amazing 👌 please let me know about the burner and Wicks how it works
There is a wick inside the copper pipe, the wick sucks up the fuel and the flame on the outside heats up the fuel creating a vapor. The vapor then becomes pressurised and escapes at the only hole that is open and that is then ignited by the external flame and starts a cycle that keeps the coil warm and pressurised.
Nice restoration. Are you sure it is a paraffin stove? It seems to be an alcohol stove.
You are almost correct, at first I thought it was a paraffin stove, but paraffin stoves don't come with a wick and you usually have to pressurise the paraffin stove variant. This one turned out to be a petrol stove, but alcohol would also work, and as we see in my video, paraffin also worked but not as good as it would with alcohol or petrol. I think this kind of stove is awesome since it works with all three fuels. Makes it a great shtf survival item.
I have a similar stove with the copper coil and the instructions say PETROL. Great job.
@@AJRestoration As you see, it perfectly runs on paraffine. Petrol-only stoves can't work on paraffine: their jet holes are wider so paraffin will burn with brightly-yellow flame with smoke and soot.
Also, pressure release with fuel cap is extremely dangerous with petrol/gas (but can be used with paraffin). You will blow the flame off and after this open the fuel cap.
I really like this one,maybe you sould make coffee with it I would like to see a video like that.
😁
Oh definitely I like that idea!