coleman gas heators.

Lanterns, stoves, etc... anything old!

Postby rainjer » Sun Jan 09, 2011 12:27 am

I have one. It is a real pain. I think it needs a new wick. They do not pump up. They draw the fuel up to the head via a wick. I have been told they work well.

Here are the instructions.

http://www.oldcolemanparts.com/resource ... /512_1.htm

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Postby Wolffarmer » Sun Jan 09, 2011 10:24 am

I have a 512, one that you poor fuel on the top then light. better make sure there is nothing flamable for a few feet above it until it burns down. I think later ones are not as dramatic to light. but do not know for sure

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Postby Zollinger » Sun Jan 09, 2011 11:16 am

I have several of them. None of them are pump up, they are wick fed. They also can be a bugger to light, flare up and stink while they are lit. But they can put out good heat, just don't use in a tear or tent.
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Postby Wolffarmer » Sun Jan 09, 2011 11:54 am

I think it is the 513 model that you turn upside down until there is a spot of wet fuel appears on the material. I wonder how much those flare.

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Postby Wolffarmer » Mon Jan 10, 2011 12:09 am

For preheating my TD I just use my lantern. and crawl inside with it and read.

Ok. before you all get twisted out of shape I do crack the windows a bit. Both of them and I am setting up reading, not laying down where it is much easier to nod off. And I turn the lantern off before I get in bed. And I have a hook in the ceiling to hang it. Which I didn't put in there until after i made a mock up on my ceiling panel and spars and hung my 220 burning from it for about 4-6 hours with no signs of scorching.

As far as using a coleman heater to preheat. I see no problems with it. After the flames of starting die down they are not to hot. Seems the directions for it even indicates that you can pour the fuel back into the can while it is going and let it burn itself out. I have set some wood shavings from my hand planing on mine and it takes a good while before they start to scorch and i have never seen any catch fire. But then I have not tried it to many times or for more than one hour.

I don't think the fumes would be very bad that you would need to leave the door open much, probably just a window a crack. You would be taking it outside when you start to get in bed and then you can pump the door open and closed a few times to get good air in there.

But personally I probably would not take mine camping. They take up a whole lot of room when I will have my lantern/lanterns any way. But who knows. At least the heaters don't blind you with light.

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Postby dratkinson » Mon Jan 10, 2011 12:32 am

Wolffarmer wrote:I think it is the 513 model that you turn upside down until there is a spot of wet fuel appears on the material. I wonder how much those flare.

Randy


I was driving a VW bus (bay window model) in Omaha in the early 80s and needed to make a long winter road trip. I was complaining about freezing to death when a friend offered to loan me his Coleman heater. Must have been that model.

Before leaving on the trip, I turned it over to get the wet spot, then turned it upright and lit it on the ground. The flame was a foot or so high, burned quietly, and quickly died down leaving the top of the heater with a faint glowing hot spot that slowly spread to cover the whole top of the heater.

I put the heater on the floor in front of the front passenger's seat and hit the road. Heater worked well, I was comfortable, and there were enough air leaks in my bus to keep things safe. I remember a faint smell, but nothing bad. I checked for a while and nothing near the heater got too hot.

(Added) I left the heater running during pit stops and it was nice to get back into a warm bus. I don't remember any problems with condensation/frost forming on the inside of the windows. (Without the heater, I often had to scrape frost off the inside of the windshield and front side windows caused by my own breath---ice scraper was kept handy. Only way to prevent that problem was to keep a little fresh winter air blowing onto the windshield while driving.)

When I got where I was going, a metal cover put over the heater easily extinguished it.

The heater worked just as well on the return trip.

The trip was about 17 hours one way and held enough fuel for that long. I don't remember if I needed to refuel it before the return leg, but probably did.
Last edited by dratkinson on Mon Jan 10, 2011 6:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby Wolffarmer » Mon Jan 10, 2011 12:44 am

VW Bus heaters

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

I have a 74 Westy camper with the pop up, hasn't ran since mid 90's but i still have it ( I have 3 acres of ground and live in the country so i can keep my junkers with me ) Once when I set out on a winter trip I put a gallon of drinking water between the front seats. A few hours later I took a swig and found it had a good layer of ice on it. I swear it froze faster than it would have in my home fridge, freezer. I sure wished I knew about these things back then. I was wearing insulated pac boots and insulated gloves so I wasn't to cold. Use to keep a lap robe and ice scraper in the bug.

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Postby Wolffarmer » Mon Jan 10, 2011 9:35 pm

slowcowboy wrote:So I am guessing the idea or the drictions on pouring the gas out while it is burning is to shut it off if you lack the stove cover and you don't want to wait till the hole tank of gas burns up as I am guessing again this heator is a gas sipper not a gas hog?????


looks like now I might have got my 10 dollars worth on ebay. Slowcowboy.


Correct, as there is not shut off valve on these beasties you have to either use the snuffer. Or pour the fuel out and let the heater burn out but that might take some time, I have no idea how long as I haven't tried it. I have a snuffer.

The catalyst in the top allows the combustion to happen at a lower than normal temperature making them safer in regards to setting something on fire. But at the same time it seems to increase the production of carbon monoxide. This is all off the top of my chrome dome head. To tired to look it up. I been driving a manure truck all day.

Randy, the bringer of "sunshine"

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Postby Zollinger » Mon Jan 10, 2011 9:45 pm

If missing the snuffer, I have used an aluminum bowl to put it out. I'd be leary of pouring fuel out of a hot heater.
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Postby Judeyramone » Tue Jan 11, 2011 8:49 pm

How about Coleman stove with heat drum, like a 502. I have seen several 502s for sale on eBay, with heat drum... and once I even saw a heat drum for a 500 stove. Anybody have any experience with this sort of setup?

http://cgi.ebay.com/Coleman-502-Oct-196 ... 2309f5293b
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Postby Wolffarmer » Tue Jan 11, 2011 10:20 pm

I have seen those for sales also. Looks to me the drum would be a very good way to brand your hands, start fires and such. But would be a smaller unit. The catalytic heaters also burn a very long time on one filling.

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Postby Wolffarmer » Tue Jan 18, 2011 8:56 pm

Zollinger wrote:If missing the snuffer, I have used an aluminum bowl to put it out. I'd be leary of pouring fuel out of a hot heater.


Hey Dawn

I had my heater going today. After it got nice and hot I poured a small amount of coleman fuel ( from a bottle cap ) on it. It just evaporated. So I swung the top off the unit to let it cool a few minutes and then I poured the fuel from the heater back into a can.

As i am not posting this from the hospital it did not cause a problem.

8)

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Postby Zollinger » Wed Jan 19, 2011 12:30 pm

Good to know Randy. I was worried that you might lose the other half of your beard. :R
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Postby Wolffarmer » Wed Jan 19, 2011 5:26 pm

Zollinger wrote:Good to know Randy. I was worried that you might lose the other half of your beard. :R


:lol: :lol:

I once lost a good part of it looking down the carburetor of a car when it back fired.

oops

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