As far is those old stoves you can sometimes find those at garage or yard sales relatively cheap at times ,I picked one up for $15 bks with allitle TLC it was as good as new!!!❤
I have done many similar preservation projects have found that scotchbrite pads with comet cleanser lets you save more of the paint and just remove the rust. Soda is great for tight places where it's not possible to reach. Your finished project looks great.
Pressures range from 150 to 90 PSI. My compressor shuts off at 150 PSI and I will fall to around 90 PSI if shooting continuously. For me, anything under 90 PSI and the soda starts to lose cleaning power.
Baking soda is a very soft abrasive that is really not suitable for surface preparation of rusty steel. A much cleaner surface with all of the rust removed could have been achieved in less time with a harder grit like garnet, crushed glass or coal slag.
They are not hard to restore not more than a few moving parts. I think that tank may be gone. you don't want to put gas in it and and pump it up and have it leak all over when the stove is going. Lots of info on Colman stuff online and places to get parts
Why not answer the questions referring to the size air compressor??? In most it's more important than the gun since the gun would be useless with an underpowered compressor
Hi there, I run a 30 gallon Morgan compressor. PSI ranges from 150 to 90 before the hopper empties. Tank size or recovery rate will be the limiting factor for most people. From my experience if you can stay above 90 PSI, the soda will clean. Stay above 120 PSI and the soda will clean better and start to remove paint.
Nice restoration. It seems odd to me ( I know very little about camp stoves) that the propane supply tube runs directly over the burner. Is that normal practice?
It's not propane it's Coleman liquid fuel, like white gas, I stand corrected, it is propane, the older ones used Coleman fuel !! But it does show the fuel tank in the first part of the video!!
Yeah that seemed a little sketchy to me too... The flame ports are probably on the left and right sides with no flame under the tube directly, but still... Would have thought the tube goes under not over, or in from the side...🤔 Nice stove though.
@@render8 Nope I have two Coleman camp stoves and the generator tube goes straight across the main burner on the right, it strikes me as strange too !!
The Colman lamps and cookers that use/when using liquid fuels require the liquid to be atomized then heated into a vapor to burn efficiently. The fuel lines run near or over the burner to heat that fuel before burning as a flame for cookers or within the mantle for lamps
Really enjoyed watching this. Thanks for taking the time. I have a small project that this video has pushed me to complete.
what size air compressor are you using
What is the psi your compressor is putting out? 100, 120 psi or 140 psi? just curious. Thanks
As far is those old stoves you can sometimes find those at garage or yard sales relatively cheap at times ,I picked one up for $15 bks with allitle TLC it was as good as new!!!❤
Glad you did! They don't make them like that anymore and they need to be saved!
I have done many similar preservation projects have found that scotchbrite pads with comet cleanser lets you save more of the paint and just remove the rust. Soda is great for tight places where it's not possible to reach. Your finished project looks great.
Thanks!
Thanks! I knew there was one tool at HF that I haven't bought yet. 😉
Just One?
Works great! could you please share the specs of your compressor?
Glad to see the gun itself has lasted over a year for you
Very nice
So I can just use baking soda. I have the same blaster. Does the blaster still work because my directions said no baking soda.
Paint it quick before it rusts. Can also use the baking soda in a large tub of water and electrolysis to remove rust.
What store did yoiu get your conversion valve for the cyclinder gas from?
It looks like it's taking off the paint but not the rust or is that just burn marks on the bare metal?
What pressure did you set your compressor to and what is the CFM of it?
Pressures range from 150 to 90 PSI. My compressor shuts off at 150 PSI and I will fall to around 90 PSI if shooting continuously. For me, anything under 90 PSI and the soda starts to lose cleaning power.
What other media can you feed through the blaster?
Its old and crusty, but it looks like you had all the pieces
Is that a special tip on your HF gun or is that the one that came with it?
Came with it
Baking soda is a very soft abrasive that is really not suitable for surface preparation of rusty steel. A much cleaner surface with all of the rust removed could have been achieved in less time with a harder grit like garnet, crushed glass or coal slag.
They are not hard to restore not more than a few moving parts. I think that tank may be gone. you don't want to put gas in it and and pump it up and have it leak all over when the stove is going. Lots of info on Colman stuff online and places to get parts
What is the compressor pressure in psi on the airgun?
30 gallon, PSI ranges from minimum 90 to 150 max
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Why not answer the questions referring to the size air compressor??? In most it's more important than the gun since the gun would be useless with an underpowered compressor
Hi there, I run a 30 gallon Morgan compressor. PSI ranges from 150 to 90 before the hopper empties. Tank size or recovery rate will be the limiting factor for most people. From my experience if you can stay above 90 PSI, the soda will clean. Stay above 120 PSI and the soda will clean better and start to remove paint.
How many boxes of soda
I really don’t remember. Prob around 6 to 8 pounds of soda for this project
Nice job. Everything's better with bacon.
Agree! Thanks for watching!
Considering the price of a new cooker its really not worth the time to blast this. Unless you want it for nostalgia reasons.
They don’t build them like this anymore. But I saved it for nostalgia reasons.
Nice restoration. It seems odd to me ( I know very little about camp stoves) that the propane supply tube runs directly over the burner. Is that normal practice?
It's not propane it's Coleman liquid fuel, like white gas, I stand corrected, it is propane, the older ones used Coleman fuel !! But it does show the fuel tank in the first part of the video!!
Yeah that seemed a little sketchy to me too...
The flame ports are probably on the left and right sides with no flame under the tube directly, but still... Would have thought the tube goes under not over, or in from the side...🤔
Nice stove though.
@@render8 Nope I have two Coleman camp stoves and the generator tube goes straight across the main burner on the right, it strikes me as strange too !!
It a a propane conversion kit that I used. It is odd, but it works fine
The Colman lamps and cookers that use/when using liquid fuels require the liquid to be atomized then heated into a vapor to burn efficiently. The fuel lines run near or over the burner to heat that fuel before burning as a flame for cookers or within the mantle for lamps