babington burner parts
Lets save money on our utility bills
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Babington Oil Burner - Burn All Kind of Waste Oil
This blog is all about free and cheap energy. how to stay off grid and save money.we all pay big money for big fat profitable oil,gas,hydro company's, every year they keep jack up utility bills, but for a low or middle class family its a life surviving challenge just to stay warm or to do our daily living.
“The Army tried for a long time to get this to work, but when the Marine Corps took the lead on the program, they discovered a new piece of technology called the Babington Airtronic Burner,” Velez said. “Conventional high-powered burners shoot air and fuel through a nozzle, which gets clogged. This burner uses the principle of the whale. Simply put, when a whale sprays a plume of water, it is not spitting water, but air. There is a thin film of water that forms over the hole and when the air blows out, it atomizes the water, making it look like a spray. “The burner uses the same principle,” he explained. “It is a sphere with a little slit in it. Fuel runs over the top of the sphere and air is pushed through the slit. When fuel touches the slit, it is atomized for complete combustion.” This technology enables the burner to achieve a temperature of 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Velez said that because the burner produces such high heat, there are no emissions.
Read more from: http://www.green-trust.org/2000/biofuel/babington/default.htm
Builiding a Babington oil burner
Usefull links:
http://www.green-trust.org/2000/biofuel/babington/default.htm
http://www.rexresearch.com/babingtn/babingtn.htm#popsci
“The Army tried for a long time to get this to work, but when the Marine Corps took the lead on the program, they discovered a new piece of technology called the Babington Airtronic Burner,” Velez said. “Conventional high-powered burners shoot air and fuel through a nozzle, which gets clogged. This burner uses the principle of the whale. Simply put, when a whale sprays a plume of water, it is not spitting water, but air. There is a thin film of water that forms over the hole and when the air blows out, it atomizes the water, making it look like a spray. “The burner uses the same principle,” he explained. “It is a sphere with a little slit in it. Fuel runs over the top of the sphere and air is pushed through the slit. When fuel touches the slit, it is atomized for complete combustion.” This technology enables the burner to achieve a temperature of 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Velez said that because the burner produces such high heat, there are no emissions.
Read more from: http://www.green-trust.org/2000/biofuel/babington/default.htm
Builiding a Babington oil burner
Usefull links:
http://www.green-trust.org/2000/biofuel/babington/default.htm
http://www.rexresearch.com/babingtn/babingtn.htm#popsci
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Babington Oil Burner
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