Disclaimer: I be not from here.
What I wonder could be here somewhere. If so, please forgive asking repeat questions. This only looks long. Don't be fooled by all the print. Some speculation is expected.
Thanks, up-front . . . I am extremely grateful for any & all information and/or helpful suggestions you share.
You built & tested & trouble-shot one, so I ask about the potentially boring details. That was a year & 1/2 ago. I read a few things you wrote in the between, but not much definitive. Is it burning clean & hot now? Post any pictures I missed? What's your MPG?
Is the machine you built copied from the 1ST or 2ND TMEN burner? Or is it like Spike's with the fire hung outside?
- (With 2 TMEN, Spike, Roger Sanders, and Ozzirt burners, plus the others out there, I need a smidgeon more clarity.)
Near Chattanooga, huh? It do get cold there.
What was the fuel rich thing, and what was the fix? Too little combustion air, coupled with incomplete mixing would make sense. My truck smoked white-gray & lost power (big time) when the air filter clogged. It sure did pour black smoke, burning the fuel coating when it got a new K&N. WVO has to be 150F+ before introducing it to the flame or it soots & coke badly.
I'm surprized the rather short funnels (intake, over the burner - right?) works as well as they do. If yours is longer, it should only improve the swirl, burn, etc. Aerodynamics.
The Headers by Ed website has a ton of data explainin' the theory better than I do. That intake pipe is an air plenum. Flow tolerates gradual changes far better than ripples, roughness, and abrupt angles.
That oil pump idea is whiz-bang. I be likin' that & the power steering pump, right much. I needed them last winter. Wait a minute while I tell my brother.
There are portions of the burner I don't understand, yet, mostly from lack of information. These are a bit different than the ones sold in 1970. Your burner is entirely within the tank, where the fire is contained. Right? How tall are the sides of the lowest pot? Ya think a cast iron Dutch oven would be useful, or too tall to burn correctly? I want to contain the oil in the event of too much oil at the wrong time.
Cool observation. The wind does blow water through the blocks, sorta. (There's a long word for it. Something like hydro-graphic or hygrographic - sounding like hydrostatic). A little extra pressure on one side pushes the water as it pulls itself into tiny passages in the porous block.
O my, the end. Thanks again, Ryan.
- Ron