J
[email protected]
Guest
On Thu, 11 Nov 2004 21:08:07 GMT, Torak <[email protected]>
wrote:
>David G. Bell wrote:
>> [email protected] "Torak" wrote:
>>>John-news-group wrote:
>>>
>>>>Hi
>>>>
>>>>Do any of you guys use wood fires for a brew when your out playing?
>>>
>>>Of course. I light it with diesel.
>>>
>>>
>>>...and I probably don't need to mention this, but just in case anyone
>>>wants to tell me what a bloody stupid idea that would be, glance briefly
>>>at the Disco 3 threads.... ;-)
>>
>> Diesel takes a bit of lighting. I wouldn't call it safe, but neither is
>> it "bloody stupid" by default.
>
>Agreed. And considering that Clarkson lit it by splashing it over a pile
>of sticks and dropping a match on it, I suspect he wasn't using diesel.
>
>When we had firefighting training in the Swedish Air Force, they used a
>big vat of diesel that we had to extinguish - they used a blowtorch to
>light it.
My previous career was an aviation firefighter - kerosene is pretty
hard to light as well, we generally had to pour 20 or so litres of
petrol over it to get it to reliably light (easily).
For lighting camp fires I've seen petrol in a half coke can used -
just light it with a match and it burns like a large candle (ie it
doesn't explode or go woof).
wrote:
>David G. Bell wrote:
>> [email protected] "Torak" wrote:
>>>John-news-group wrote:
>>>
>>>>Hi
>>>>
>>>>Do any of you guys use wood fires for a brew when your out playing?
>>>
>>>Of course. I light it with diesel.
>>>
>>>
>>>...and I probably don't need to mention this, but just in case anyone
>>>wants to tell me what a bloody stupid idea that would be, glance briefly
>>>at the Disco 3 threads.... ;-)
>>
>> Diesel takes a bit of lighting. I wouldn't call it safe, but neither is
>> it "bloody stupid" by default.
>
>Agreed. And considering that Clarkson lit it by splashing it over a pile
>of sticks and dropping a match on it, I suspect he wasn't using diesel.
>
>When we had firefighting training in the Swedish Air Force, they used a
>big vat of diesel that we had to extinguish - they used a blowtorch to
>light it.
My previous career was an aviation firefighter - kerosene is pretty
hard to light as well, we generally had to pour 20 or so litres of
petrol over it to get it to reliably light (easily).
For lighting camp fires I've seen petrol in a half coke can used -
just light it with a match and it burns like a large candle (ie it
doesn't explode or go woof).