A 3/4 inch hole is drilled into the cap so that I could compress the air coming out of the air tube and aid in atomizing the oil. Check out my other video of this piece that I modified. The video is waste oil stove burner modified.
How is the air blowing into the burn chamber with the end cap on it? Are there air holes drilled around the oil hole? Nice burner! Im working on one now.
why do you have two large pipes joining the two barrels together? is one going out the flue, and the other heating up the top barrel? thanks. I have to say that this is the best looking oil burner that ive seen. most of them are ugly fire bombs. nice work.
The top barrel is the heat exchanger, which holds the heat. The flue pipe has a damper in it and I can close it to about 90% of the way. Heat rises, so I needed another tube. That is why there is two of them. This stove will muster some serious heat. Leaving the damper open just a tad will equalize the pressure between the bottom barrel and the top barrel. Closing the damper 90% of the way, I can get the exchanger heat up to 800 degrees. Put a fan on it, I can heat my shop pretty quick. Thanks
Sorry, I don't have any blueprints. I have since modified my down tube so that I could have a better control of the oil and air flow to the burner. All this is, is basic physic's. Oil and air is coming down the down tube and the oil is atomized cause the air is compressed and is released once it leaves the down tube. All the down tube does it direct the air and the oil line that is inside of it. The cap at the end has a 1" hole in it. Thats what increases the air pressure when atomizing the oil.
Is there a blueprint for this unit? I am not completely sure how it works but I would love to learn. Thank you for all your effort. This seems amazing...good luck!
I am trying to make a swimming pool waste oil burner, and searching for a fan the fan you have looks like a induction fan, can you tell cfm, rpm, and where I can get on, it also looks like the switch with dimmer may control fan speed is this correct. Also where can a find a good fuel shut off like the one your using for oil regulator. Thanks
A 3/4 inch hole is drilled into the cap so that I could compress the air coming out of the air tube and aid in atomizing the oil. Check out my other video of this piece that I modified. The video is waste oil stove burner modified.
OLetsRoll 2 months ago
How is the air blowing into the burn chamber with the end cap on it? Are there air holes drilled around the oil hole? Nice burner! Im working on one now.
rptaylorjr 3 months ago
Very nice work...whats the oil consumption?
jmye1524 1 year ago
@jmye1524 from two quarts an hour to two gallons an hour. Two gallons is the most I've burned in a hour.
OLetsRoll 1 year ago
why do you have two large pipes joining the two barrels together? is one going out the flue, and the other heating up the top barrel? thanks. I have to say that this is the best looking oil burner that ive seen. most of them are ugly fire bombs. nice work.
jessehart05 2 years ago
The top barrel is the heat exchanger, which holds the heat. The flue pipe has a damper in it and I can close it to about 90% of the way. Heat rises, so I needed another tube. That is why there is two of them. This stove will muster some serious heat. Leaving the damper open just a tad will equalize the pressure between the bottom barrel and the top barrel. Closing the damper 90% of the way, I can get the exchanger heat up to 800 degrees. Put a fan on it, I can heat my shop pretty quick. Thanks
OLetsRoll 2 years ago
Sorry, I don't have any blueprints. I have since modified my down tube so that I could have a better control of the oil and air flow to the burner. All this is, is basic physic's. Oil and air is coming down the down tube and the oil is atomized cause the air is compressed and is released once it leaves the down tube. All the down tube does it direct the air and the oil line that is inside of it. The cap at the end has a 1" hole in it. Thats what increases the air pressure when atomizing the oil.
OLetsRoll 2 years ago
Is there a blueprint for this unit? I am not completely sure how it works but I would love to learn. Thank you for all your effort. This seems amazing...good luck!
momhorner 2 years ago
do you pour oil in the stove
firewoodguy2009 2 years ago
no oil is poured in the burner. It cames from the oil line that is inside the air tube.
OLetsRoll 2 years ago
One of the best and most practical DIY burners I have seen. Very Well Done.
Could you explain how the burner section works please? it looks a very efficient and effective design.
glumpy10 2 years ago
nice
dmacosta1 2 years ago
What kind a air blower is that ? Where did you get it from ?
Nice set up..
beeguysss 2 years ago
I am trying to make a swimming pool waste oil burner, and searching for a fan the fan you have looks like a induction fan, can you tell cfm, rpm, and where I can get on, it also looks like the switch with dimmer may control fan speed is this correct. Also where can a find a good fuel shut off like the one your using for oil regulator. Thanks
highlandhillbillys 2 years ago
Thanks for the complement.
OLetsRoll 3 years ago
nice vid keep up the good work
pshed99 3 years ago