Pleaae play it safe

/ Pleaae play it safe #11  
And never use gasoline to get a burn pile going...

I cut for firewood, burn my brush piles yearly. Work with another guy occasionally. He by gosh INSISTS that one needs to at leasst mix gas with the diesel. This in spite of me demonsstrating repeatedly that diesel sstarts just fine with one match and it is the diesel in his "mix" that does the work. Gas just goes WOOSH and dies, diesel keeps burning long enough to start the fire.

There are others in my breakfast group that insist on gasoline also.
 
/ Pleaae play it safe #12  
I use gas and used motor oil at about 50/50. I have used more gas. The "whoosh" does give me an adrenaline rush- though I am smart enough to stay upwind of the fumes when I light it.
 
/ Pleaae play it safe #13  
I cut for firewood, burn my brush piles yearly. Work with another guy occasionally. He by gosh INSISTS that one needs to at leasst mix gas with the diesel. This in spite of me demonsstrating repeatedly that diesel sstarts just fine with one match and it is the diesel in his "mix" that does the work. Gas just goes WOOSH and dies, diesel keeps burning long enough to start the fire.

There are others in my breakfast group that insist on gasoline also.

Sorry for the family's tragedy...

As to burn piles this may be a good time to repeat my no fail way of lighting brush piles. Leave an alcove underneath the pile that you can access. Get one of those chimney style charcoal starters that use crumpled paper under the charcoal. Have a support underneath the pile that the lit charcoal can sit on (I use an old shovel that is missing it's handle). After a few minutes when the charcoal is burning well in the starter chimney, pour it into the alcove and make sure enough material is directly over the burning coals.

I've used this method to get soaking wet piles started with ease while it was raining. The burning coals put off enough heat to dry out and engage the material above them and get a good core fire going, no muss, no fuss.
 
/ Pleaae play it safe #14  
Sorry for the family's tragedy...

As to burn piles this may be a good time to repeat my no fail way of lighting brush piles. Leave an alcove underneath the pile that you can access. Get one of those chimney style charcoal starters that use crumpled paper under the charcoal. Have a support underneath the pile that the lit charcoal can sit on (I use an old shovel that is missing it's handle). After a few minutes when the charcoal is burning well in the starter chimney, pour it into the alcove and make sure enough material is directly over the burning coals.


I've used this method to get soaking wet piles started with ease while it was raining. The burning coals put off enough heat to dry out and engage the material above them and get a good core fire going, no muss, no fuss.

Good idea. I do similar, using a small fire starter log when the pile is damp/wet. You can get 20 of them for $10 at the local co-op. A lot safer and cleaner than fuel. When dry, I just use paper or old feed sacks.
 
/ Pleaae play it safe #15  
I save old 5 gallon oil buckets with the lids and save used motor oil in them. Then I burn it in brush piles. I end up draining bad gas out of other people's equipment who wasn't smart enough to put ethanol free gas in it and that gets mixed with the oil but it's not necessary.
 
/ Pleaae play it safe #16  
'nother thing that works great is to soak some tentest chunks with fuel and once ignited burns just fine.
My fireplace gets started using egg cartons, I get the big 12 x 12 (trays) from the local breakfast place. One 'tray' and 5-6 pieces of kindling and one match does it every time.
 
/ Pleaae play it safe #17  
A trick I learned here on TBN is to soak a roll of toilet paper with diesel then put the roll as far in the pile as you can and light it. I have burned wet piles this way.

Norm
 
/ Pleaae play it safe #18  
makes one wonder, if the wire got that hot, why it never tripped a breaker, or blew a fuse ?
 

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