Inline FabricationTitan ReloadingLee PrecisionSnyders Jerky
RepackboxReloading EverythingWidenersRotoMetals2
MidSouth Shooters Supply Load Data
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 20 of 24

Thread: Oil heat and low pressure burners

  1. #1
    Boolit Master ohland's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Posts
    2,012

    Oil heat and low pressure burners

    Furnace repairman just left. We have a Stewart-Warner "Winkler" low pressure oil burner. It is over 50 years old now, and other than two thermostats and a few relays, it is still putting out the BTUs. We need a relay replaced (should be in next week) but overall, I like using Bunker #2 because unlike gas, it will not explode...

    Why not electric? When you pay to rewire my house....
    Belle, Belle, Belle!
    Purty Gu-ur-url!

  2. #2
    Boolit Master Pb2au's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    Southwest Ohio
    Posts
    1,228
    Don't you know you are supposed to spend 15K$ on a new system to save money as opposed to replacing the relay?

  3. #3
    Boolit Master


    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    southern MO
    Posts
    2,948
    ah, I well remember those days. We had a 10x50 mobile then and the oil furnace had a 55 gallon barrel on a support frame to make it gravity feed. Worked great. Glad you are able to keep the old girl going. We have an old Ashley wood stove in the basement now and it does a very respectful job. I do have electric heat but believe me I feel much warmer with wood heat. Probably cheaper to operate too.
    Mark 5:34 And He said to her (Jesus speaking), "Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace and be healed of your affliction."

  4. #4
    In Remembrance
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    fairbanks
    Posts
    9,015
    99% of the heating done in this area is oil, but it isn't exactly by choice.

  5. #5
    Boolit Master



    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    South West Texas
    Posts
    734
    I would love to figure out an easy way to heat my garage using waste oil. I seem to collect a lot of it and taking it to town is always the last thing on my mind when I go once every couple of months... Anybody have an easy, read that as cheap, way to use it?

  6. #6
    Boolit Master

    Plate plinker's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Indiana
    Posts
    2,306
    Electric heat is costly I use the natural gas over my electric heat pump.
    May switch over to geothermal in the next 2-3 years. The utility gives a 60% discount on my rate for that!

  7. #7
    I saw a set of kick-a$$ plans on the web a while back for a home built waste oil heater. I wanna build one myself. I'll try to find a link.
    Using Tapatalk

  8. #8

  9. #9
    Boolit Grand Master

    dragon813gt's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Somewhere in SE PA
    Posts
    9,989
    A Winkler that's still running. We stopped working on them 15 years ago for liability reasons. They are also really inefficient compared to a retention head burner. You may have the last running Winkler in the nation

  10. #10
    Moderator Emeritus

    MaryB's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2013
    Location
    SW Minnesota
    Posts
    10,317
    I heat with natural gas and wood pellets. Has to get below 30 degrees for me to fire up the pellet stove though or I roast. I let it go out when I head to bed and let the furnace take over so I don't have to watch it.

    I had oil hat at one farm site I was renting, jelled up the fuel one night when it was -25, was loads of fun getting that going again. Got out a garden hose from the hot water heater and ran it over the pipe, mixed in 10 gallons of kerosene to thin the tank. Was lucky I had the kerosene, used it to heat the living room.

  11. #11
    Boolit Grand Master GhostHawk's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    Fargo ND
    Posts
    7,102
    Dragon nailed it, efficiency!

    I put in a new Natural Gas Forced Air furnace 17 years ago about this time of year. I had just bought the house, furnace looked old, but ok. Then one night it got cold enough for it to want to run.

    BANG


    BANG
    BANG


    KERBANG!!!!








    Did the work myself with some help with friends, cost under 1k. Unlike fuel oil, my Natural Gas is 80% + efficient. (Need combustion air intake from outside to get to 90) I suspect your old winkler is probably doing good to get 35-40% efficiency.

    Our fuel bill even in North Dakota is very liveable. Worst I've seen was 150 a month then we got on budget plan and it settled into about 120-130. Last year we got a no interest, no payment loan from the City, put in all new windows, doors, (Loan disappears in 10 years) and watched our fuel bill shrink to half.

    Natural gas rocks IF you can get it.
    Its price stable, its safe, consistent, and pretty much worry free.
    Pretty much everything in the house that can be gas, is. Most have hot surface ignition, only the 16 yr old water heater and kitchen stove still has pilot.

    Good news is with no power we can and have managed for up to 5 days on just the kitchen stove.

  12. #12
    Boolit Buddy


    Mtnfolk75's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    Shirley Meadows, CA
    Posts
    352
    MaryB,

    We also heat with a pellet stove about 180 days a year. We also, shut down at bedtime and relight while the coffee is brewing. We have no other heat with the exception of a small electric in the bathroom and bedroom that are on a thermostat.
    Our 538 Sq Ft cabin has 1 bedroom, bath, kitchen & living room. We heated about half the winter of 2005-2006 with electric, when our Propane Earth Stove died. SCE bills went from about $75 to $700 a month. That is what prompted the pellet set up
    in October 2006. $2,300 stove that drop shipped from Utah and I installed, lasted until Spring 2012 when parts became obsolete. Replaced with a $1,400 stove from Ace Hardware, 3 times the stove and much more efficient, went from burning about 75 bags average to 60'ish last winter.

    BTW, we are all electric, dropped propane with the earth stove. We get too much snow to get regular propane deliveries & a 250 gallon tank wouldn't last the winter. SCE bill is usually about $40 summer & $80 winter now.
    Livin' my dream in a little cabin on a mountain .....
    USN Vet 1972-1980, Retired CA Peace Officer, NRA Lifer
    Plank Owner - USS Jesse L. Brown (DE-1089) 17Feb73 / USS Kinkaid (DD-965) 17Jul76
    RIP Mom & Brother, you will never be forgotten & forever loved

  13. #13
    Boolit Grand Master

    dragon813gt's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Somewhere in SE PA
    Posts
    9,989
    If you want to be all electric then geothermal is the way to go. The company I work for does everything but we were formed around geothermal. If you can afford the upfront cost of the well you are set for 100 years, well wise. The units themselves, brand dependent, last 20 years plus. We have a 27yo house w/ 11 Waterfurnaces in it. 9 are still original and aren't going away anytime soon.

    Modern air to air heat pumps are fairly efficient. They are over 100% above 40 degrees. But they taper off fairly quickly. The ductless minisplits, Mitsubishi Hyper Hear, run down to 20 and are still efficient. Electric backup, pretty much a toaster, is what kills your electric bills. The longer you stay off of it the cheaper your bills will be.

    I have natural gas at my house. If I could get a well driller in my yard I would put geothermal in no questions asked. We have less service calls w/ them by a large margin. And w/ 30% of new sales being geothermal and close to 1,000 units running we're talking a good bit of equipment. I ripped out a monster belt driven forced air oil furnace when I bought my house. It was originally coal fired. Pretty much a 55 gallon drum w/ a burner bolted to it. Best I could get w/ a Beckett AFG was 72% burner efficiency. Total system efficiency was more like 30%.

  14. #14
    Moderator Emeritus


    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    SW Montana
    Posts
    12,479
    I last saw a low pressure oil burner in 79 and my boss said "no way are we touching that" when they wanted it serviced. I knew enough about them to call first and he said "eat the milage charge and get out now".
    [The Montana Gianni] Front sight and squeeze

  15. #15
    Moderator Emeritus

    MaryB's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2013
    Location
    SW Minnesota
    Posts
    10,317
    My living room is impossible to heat with the furnace unless I run a huge plenum across the ceiling then duct to the floors. Put in the pellet stove and the living room stays a toasty 78 while the rest of the house is around 74. If you use any fans to move air around put them on the floor and push the cold dense air towards the stove. Works 100% better than trying to push hot air where it doesn't want to go.

    Gas bill used to hit $120 on the coldest days, I can burn $80 worth of pellets and have a $20 gas bill now. If I fine tune this new pellet stove better I can probably do an overnight burn like I used to with my Bixby. If corn bottoms in price I may switch to it.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mtnfolk75 View Post
    MaryB,

    We also heat with a pellet stove about 180 days a year. We also, shut down at bedtime and relight while the coffee is brewing. We have no other heat with the exception of a small electric in the bathroom and bedroom that are on a thermostat.
    Our 538 Sq Ft cabin has 1 bedroom, bath, kitchen & living room. We heated about half the winter of 2005-2006 with electric, when our Propane Earth Stove died. SCE bills went from about $75 to $700 a month. That is what prompted the pellet set up
    in October 2006. $2,300 stove that drop shipped from Utah and I installed, lasted until Spring 2012 when parts became obsolete. Replaced with a $1,400 stove from Ace Hardware, 3 times the stove and much more efficient, went from burning about 75 bags average to 60'ish last winter.

    BTW, we are all electric, dropped propane with the earth stove. We get too much snow to get regular propane deliveries & a 250 gallon tank wouldn't last the winter. SCE bill is usually about $40 summer & $80 winter now.

  16. #16
    Boolit Master ohland's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Posts
    2,012
    Quote Originally Posted by dragon813gt View Post
    A Winkler that's still running. We stopped working on them 15 years ago for liability reasons. They are also really inefficient compared to a retention head burner. You may have the last running Winkler in the nation
    Huh, thing is pretty much boolit pruf. Some electric parts fail (relay contacts), I scrape off the light soot from the flue sensor (bimetallic strip or something), but it is from 1964, so there is little electronic on it. I dimly remember the sticker on the side from a service call, 80 or 85 percent. Don't remember quite what. With the fuel tank inside the basement, it never freezes. My Dad originally had the fuel tank outside, but the first winter answered that question.

    Even have the original user's manual / parts list in the original (beaten-up) 9x11 1/2 envelope. Oh, it is a Low-Pressure furnace....
    Belle, Belle, Belle!
    Purty Gu-ur-url!

  17. #17
    Boolit Grand Master

    dragon813gt's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Somewhere in SE PA
    Posts
    9,989
    There is no way it's at 80-85% efficiency. Depending on when it was done it could have been done w/ a wet kit. If you didn't use them correctly you got false readings. They also aren't real time so you can't watch the burn. Don't get me wrong. A Winkler is the Cadillac of low pressure burners. To much liability to work on them anymore. Especially w/ the very low numbers left. That stack relay is another huge liability. Let's put the safety in the flue where it's likely to fail. They get ripped out and converted or we don't work on the unit. It's one thing if you work on this stuff yourself. But when you have thousands of customers you don't take any chances.

  18. #18
    Boolit Master ohland's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Posts
    2,012

    Popular Science Feb 1959 - "Saving 15% on Heating a House"

    Unfortunately, Google allows one to view only. Pages 132-135.
    http://books.google.com/books?id=2yU...warner&f=false

    From ad copy, "watch the Winkler LP burn crude oil, crankcase drainings, heavy oils, light oils, catalytic oils. Winkler challenges any other burner to pass these tests.

    Note that the EPA may not be totally thrilled with someone using their Government Motors used oil. I know of nothing but Bunker #2 in ours, though I saw a snippet suggesting that #4 was to be supported. No specific "as-of" date, or serial number. FAIK, it never did support #4, YMMV.

    Ooh, a period newspaper ad - CENTRAL HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE 9 N. Terrace St. Janesville (WI)

    My grand dad was (eventually) from 455 N Terrace... It is a small world...
    Last edited by ohland; 09-19-2014 at 09:14 PM.
    Belle, Belle, Belle!
    Purty Gu-ur-url!

  19. #19
    Boolit Grand Master

    dragon813gt's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Somewhere in SE PA
    Posts
    9,989
    I don't understand the point of your post. Just because it can burn different oils doesn't make it better. Beckett/Riello/Carlin and designed to burn #1 and #2. And they do it well because they are high static retention head burners. I work on industrial boilers that burn #6. They are steam atomized burners and they are anything but efficient. But what do you expect when you're burning tar.

    If you're happy w/ your burner that's all that matters. W/ the cost of oil most people want the most efficient one they can get. Which is still well below gas due to the nature of condensing flues and soot formation. There is a reason Klondikes were bulled from the market.

  20. #20
    Boolit Master ohland's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Posts
    2,012
    LP oil burner works OK, Bunker #2 will not explode and I don't need to rewire my house....

    The eccentric that drives the pistons is down about 51RPM. The LP burner has pre-mixed oil-air foam being pushed out a bigger nozzle than HP. It can handle sediment up to 1/16 in size.

    For modern construction, I don't think oil would be in the running. But just like boolits, its good enough for what it does.
    Belle, Belle, Belle!
    Purty Gu-ur-url!

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Abbreviations used in Reloading

BP Bronze Point IMR Improved Military Rifle PTD Pointed
BR Bench Rest M Magnum RN Round Nose
BT Boat Tail PL Power-Lokt SP Soft Point
C Compressed Charge PR Primer SPCL Soft Point "Core-Lokt"
HP Hollow Point PSPCL Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" C.O.L. Cartridge Overall Length
PSP Pointed Soft Point Spz Spitzer Point SBT Spitzer Boat Tail
LRN Lead Round Nose LWC Lead Wad Cutter LSWC Lead Semi Wad Cutter
GC Gas Check