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16/8/2004 at 10:05pm
Location: South Wales Outfit: Khyam Rigipod Excelsior
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Joined: 14/7/2003 Diamond Member
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Quote: Originally posted by Breezeblock on 16/08/2004
The other fuel is Coleman Fuel, which, as stated before, is just more refined petrol
It is, and Coleman fuel does not have benzene in it. The benzene in petrol is supposed to be carsenogenic, although whether it poses an actual health risk when petrol is used as a stove fuel is very difficult to know, my mate the research chemist reckons the risk is low, others do not. Myself I will continue to use petrol in my Coleman stove.
and it costs about £40 per gallon!!!.
Thats cheap ....... I have seen it for £59 a gallon (£6.50 for 500ml).
In the US Coleman Fuel is £2.70p a Gallon (yes I mean two pounds 70 pence).
You cannot use anything else but these two fuels in a Coleman. Stick to the unleaded, carry it in a proper petrol can and observe all safety precautions.
Agreed, and you can get containers designed for petrol in 0.33, 0.5, 0.7, 1L sizes.
------------- Stuart.
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17/8/2004 at 10:54am
Location: Middlesex Outfit: Iveco Motorhome + lotsa tents
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i use a two burner Coleman duel fuel cooker & a duel fuel single burner, they are the biz. i used to hate the butane gas on cold days! & what a pain in the bum if you run out in the night & all the shops are shut, happend to me a few time in the past. you can get petrol almost anywhere, yes i even got a farmer at 2am to sell me a ltr oops!
it burns hotter and you get your breckie faster on cold days mmm & your cuppa! oh did i say it works out a lot cheaper too? easy to store in a standard petrol can, or like me i use a couple of zig bottles 1ltr each.
one fill lasts about 7 or 8 hrs.
light up your tent with LEDs look at these http://www.ultraleds.co.uk/default.php?cPath=29&osCsid=c2b833ab56750611425e019f88e1d6c9
------------- DELTA..
aka Paul
“Imagination is everything. It is the preview of life's coming attractions.”
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20/8/2004 at 11:36am
Location: Zoetermeer Holland Outfit: Chateau 430 Nice
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OK, hardly any risk. The use of benzene is prohibited for may purposes due to its characteristics. Years ago they thought it was great for e.g. washing fabrics with difficult stains. The grandfather of my ex-wife used workes at the Shell refinery (Rotterdam). They used to wash heavily stained overalls and trousers in it, just dipped it in a drum with benzene and let it dry. It evaporates extremely fast. Until they found out you would get cancer. From then it was not that easy to get.
As it is very combustible, it burns very easy. That's why it fully burns in a car motor, yes, unless the motor gets to much fuel. But even then it is a matter of the concentration. It is just an additive, so just a little bit in the petrol (although I don't know how much exactly). Anyway, in normal use it should burn completely. If the stove is well maintained it should not be a problem. A dirty stove might create more problems, but I still wonder how much of the fuel fumes would not be combusted at all. It mainly causes soot, due to bad combustion, this by itself causing even worse combustion.
I think however the benzene still will be burnt, the byproducts of bad combustion being soot and CO rather than pure fuel.
------------- WL
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