Flammable diesel?

newtothis

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Given that it's well below 55°C in London today, what are the chances of a discarded fag butt leading to mass immolation?
 
I used to think diesel was very hard to ignite until I started using a drip-fed diesel stove.

To light this stove, we drip a small amount of diesel into a tray, drop in a tiny paper wad (less than a fingernail piece of paper screwed up) into the tray. Light the paper wad with a match, and the diesel is happily burning away in no time. All this still works in sub zero temperatures.

The paper is a better ignition source than a cigarette, but the bottom line is diesel is more flammable than I had been led to believe, especially a shallow pool of diesel.
 
I used to think diesel was very hard to ignite until I started using a drip-fed diesel stove.

To light this stove, we drip a small amount of diesel into a tray, drop in a tiny paper wad (less than a fingernail piece of paper screwed up) into the tray. Light the paper wad with a match, and the diesel is happily burning away in no time. All this still works in sub zero temperatures.

The paper is a better ignition source than a cigarette, but the bottom line is diesel is more flammable than I had been led to believe, especially a shallow pool of diesel.
Try the same with a cigarette - you'll put the cigarette out.
 
I used to think diesel was very hard to ignite until I started using a drip-fed diesel stove.

To light this stove, we drip a small amount of diesel into a tray, drop in a tiny paper wad (less than a fingernail piece of paper screwed up) into the tray. Light the paper wad with a match, and the diesel is happily burning away in no time. All this still works in sub zero temperatures.

The paper is a better ignition source than a cigarette, but the bottom line is diesel is more flammable than I had been led to believe, especially a shallow pool of diesel.
Only boat I've been on that had a diesel heater required a complicated process of putting meths in first to get things up to temp before the diesel could be introduced.
 
Try the same with a cigarette - you'll put the cigarette out.
If you dropped the cigarette into a deep pool of diesel, say a diesel tank, I would be confident it would just extinguish the cigarette.

Drop a lit cigarette into a shallow tray, say 1-2mm of diesel, where the oxygen can still reach and support the combustion of the cigarette, and I am not so sure.

I can understand the skepticism; before owning a diesel stove, I felt the same, but lighting a tray of diesel every winter’s morning taught me that it is surprisingly easy to start a diesel fire.
 
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Only boat I've been on that had a diesel heater required a complicated process of putting meths in first to get things up to temp before the diesel could be introduced.
Using methylated spirits to start the stove is an option, but the accelerant is not necessary. We found the small wad of paper igniting the diesel itself less fussy and, importantly, when cruising out of the way places, removes the need for methylated spirits.

The main drawback is there is a little more carbon buildup in the bottom of the tray from the residue of the burnt paper. This needs to be periodically cleaned, but the effect is minimal if you only use a tiny bit of paper.
 
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If you dropped the cigarette into a deep pool of diesel, say a diesel tank, I would be confident it would just extinguish the cigarette.

Drop a lit cigarette into a shallow tray, say 1-2mm of diesel, where the oxygen can still reach and support the combustion of the cigarette, and I am not so sure.

I can understand the skepticism; before owning a diesel stove, I felt the same, but lighting a tray of diesel every winter’s morning taught me that it is surprisingly easy to start a diesel fire.
This seems to indicate otherwise even with a shallow dish of diesel.
 
Using methylated spirits to start the stove is an option, but the accelerant is not necessary. We found the small wad of paper igniting the diesel itself less fussy and, importantly, when cruising out of the way places, removes the need for methylated spirits.

The main drawback is there is a little more carbon buildup in the bottom of the tray from the residue of the burnt paper. This needs to be periodically cleaned, but the effect is minimal if you only use a tiny bit of paper.
Can you use a bit of non-flammable wick or oven seal instead to get something cleaner and more persistent?
 
Can you use a bit of non-flammable wick or oven seal instead to get something cleaner and more persistent?
That is a good idea, thanks.

I will try this next time, but our current temperatures are a far cry from our winters in Scotland. When it is only dropping to around 27°C, there is not much incentive to light a heater :).
 
This seems to indicate otherwise even with a shallow dish of diesel.
The video is quite accurate. It does take some time to start burning (the video measured a minute), but the paper acts as a wick so even a tiny bit of paper burns for a long time when it is soaking up diesel.

Diesel is much safer than gasoline, but in emphasising this message, it has left the impression that it is harder to start a diesel fire than is true in practice.

Before using the diesel stove, I would not have thought you could start a diesel fire with the small flame from a simple match, without using a more flammable accelerant to start the process. Maybe this was my misunderstanding alone, but if other yachtsmen have a similar impression, it is important to dispel that myth.

The video does that better than my ramblings, so thanks Harry for posting.
 
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Can you use a bit of non-flammable wick or oven seal instead to get something cleaner and more persistent?
Might be a slight airbourne fibre particulate hazard, especially from asbestos, but perhaps also from glass fibre. Maybe less than the particulates from paper, though.

Cigarette papers might be convenient, and cigarettes are obviously good for you, otherwise they wouldn't be legal.
 
Might be a slight airbourne fibre particulate hazard, especially from asbestos, but perhaps also from glass fibre. Maybe less than the particulates from paper, though.

Cigarette papers might be convenient, and cigarettes are obviously good for you, otherwise they wouldn't be legal.
Perhaps oven seals are only safe because they are usually soaked not in diesel but in edible grease...
 
The video is quite accurate. It does take some time to start burning (the video measured a minute), but the paper acts as a wick so even a tiny bit of paper burns for a long time when it is soaking up diesel.

Diesel is much safer than gasoline, but in emphasising this message, it has left the impression that it is harder to start a diesel fire than is true in practice.
Obviously, you can get diesel burning, and a proper diesel fire isn't something I want to be anywhere near, unless it's well confined in a heater but, just supposing someone dropped a cigarette in a shallow puddle of diesel, and it acted as a wick, you've now got a small oil lamp flame; I just can't see it spreading, any more than the flame of a candle spreads over the molten wax. One plod with his size 11 - or even a lady plod with her size 5 could deal with it.
 
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