Need A Light ???

   / Need A Light ??? #1  

scott_vt

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Oct 5, 2004
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east wells,vt
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1986 MF 1040, 1942 Farmall A, 1949 Farmall Super A
My Pop gave me this old torch, buffed it up and put a piece of 1/2" copper tubing out the top with a light socket, add a shade and voila, a lamp!

Any old plumbers out there that used one of these? They ran on white gas i believe, wonder how many houses these things burned down before outlawed ? /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

Scotty
 

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   / Need A Light ??? #2  
I have my Dad's torch in the shed. We used it to thaw water pipes in the house where I grew up.

I think we used white gas also. I recall that it has a small tray under the torch part. You pour some gas in that, and light that gas. It pre-heats the torch, so it will function well.

I'm not sure but what they were supposed to run on kerosene and it took the pre-heat to get it going.

It sure was a spectacle to see it being lighted!

Ron
 
   / Need A Light ???
  • Thread Starter
#3  
Hi Ron,
Yeah, those old things just look dangerous! I vaguely remember my Pop or someone in our cellar using one of those things and Im almost 55, so Im thinkin it was quite a few years ago /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

scotty

ps And they say chainsaws are dangerous /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
   / Need A Light ??? #4  
Scotty, I'm just a little older than you, and it's definitely been more than 50 years ago, but I can remember my granddad using one of them, although I've never used one myself.
 
   / Need A Light ???
  • Thread Starter
#5  
Mornin Bird,
Thanks for the timetable check /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

Im thinkin I remember him using that thing, but the memory isnt what it used to be /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif

Senior moment ?

scotty
 
   / Need A Light ??? #6  
My Dad used one of those to scorch the paint on our house - in order to scrape it off for repainting. That woulda been about 1960. He kept it for years after but never used it again.
 
   / Need A Light ???
  • Thread Starter
#7  
Hi Mike,
Thanks for the reply, I think your Dad was a lot safer using it on the outside of the house than the inside /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

scotty
 
   / Need A Light ??? #8  
Torchs don't burn houses just like guns don't kill people. There were a lot less of them in use during there day than the propane torch of todays time. One thing about those old blow torchs they had to be pumped up about every 1/2 hour so you could not leave it along for very long, Where as the propane could be left burning until the tank is dry.
 
   / Need A Light ??? #9  
I've got one and still use it occasionally when I have a job that needs more heat than a propane torch. Note I said "more heat" not "higher temperature". It has a very large flame. It uses white gas. I don't believe it could run on kerosene.

Getting "white" gas is no problem. For these torches "white gas" just means unleaded. Fill plug is on the bottom and the bottom is concave and acts as a funnel. You pump it up, pump is the handle. Put your hand over the business end of the torch and turn on the gas. The gas is a very fine stream that comes out of the nozzle at a slight angle and hits the burner side. You keep your hand over the end until the burner pan under the nozzle fills up 1/2 way. Turn off the gas, light the gas in the burner pan. Let it burn until it almost burns out. This preheats the nozzle barrel. Turn on the gas and it starts, let the burner pan burn empty. Use torch, pump as necessary. The pump pressurizes the tank just like on a Hudson bug sprayer.
 
   / Need A Light ??? #10  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Getting "white" gas is no problem. For these torches "white gas" just means unleaded. )</font>

Yeah, and you can buy one gallon cans of Coleman lantern fuel, but have you noticed the prices? In the late '50s when we were selling regular gas for 30 cents a gallon or a little less, we also sold "white gas" and kerosene for 10 cents a gallon. I've never understood why unleaded was so much cheaper then and higher now.
 

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