OP
I hear you. Reluctant to give up the space though. Might add a guard of some sort.Not UNLESS you really give it a good smack, knocking it clean off the tank or cracking the valve or tank bung.
Not saying it would happen but I've seen weirder stuff occur.
Just my 2¢.
Initial experiments are successful. Oil needs a good bit of preheating though. I think I will run it through a hot tank before it comes to the burner. I was using this for forced air. It worked good once the oil was hot enough. Blast furnaceish
I was originally planning to do a babington, mainly because I don't want to mess around with a lot of filtration, then I saw the drip type burners on YouTube and that makes more sense to me. Clean out the crusties every few weeks and just let er rip.According to GerrysDiy and 2jeffs1 on u-toob that seems to be the secret. Only they use the container the oil drips into to get the oil to burn (vaporize).
When I was playing around with an old oil furnace I tried preheating the oil method also. It somewhat worked but not as well as I'd hoped for. The Babington burner I made worked pretty decent but adapting it to the furnace wasn't a very easy task.
I ended up abandoning the project, though I still have all the pieces/parts from a few years back.
I was originally planning to do a babington, mainly because I don't want to mess around with a lot of filtration, then I saw the drip type burners on YouTube and that makes more sense to me. Clean out the crusties every few weeks and just let er rip.
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I could probably put some pallet racking over it. Plenty left.It depends on how big you are, 24" would be kinda tight for me. I do like the idea much better, the whole thing begs for a mezzanine over it! Looking at the pictures, I think you could bring it out to the same depth as the copper lines and it would act as a kind of barrier, you would intentionally keep away from the tank and it would be a visual cue to stay away from those lines.
That's what I just got rid of! I didn't like that space before I probably wouldn't a second time.I would box the thing in and make it the mechanical room, then you don't have any accidental damage, at least not as easy. It is looking really good and next year you will really feel the benefit!
His project is a early 70s olds convertible. The frame was bad so we got a frame from an el Camino, which is very similar but longer. We chopped 4 in out of the frame and welded it back together. Neither of us had ever done such a thing so we figured it out together.Well you can't just leave us with that, what are you working on and what are you doing with it?
JB










Thank you. I am just sorry I missed the window this winter. I just don't work very fast in the chaos. I need organization bad.Makes sense, looking forward to seeing how this all works out in the end. I'm sure you will love having a nice warm shop next winter.
JB