Is there a windproof lighter that actually works?

Turboflame ones are terrible my first one had ignitor problems and the second bought from a chandlers and never tested until I was far away has never worked but a cheap plastic £3.50 one from my local hardware shop seems to be holding up though!
 
Turboflame ones are terrible my first one had ignitor problems and the second bought from a chandlers and never tested until I was far away has never worked but a cheap plastic £3.50 one from my local hardware shop seems to be holding up though!

The general opinion seems to be that Turboflame are not very good.
 
I couldn't even pretend not to have heard that the Turboflame had a doubtful reputation. I just wanted one, and for a short time it was okay, though the flame was gutless. But when the ignition stopped working - :disgust: This wasn't a prudent purchase. Nice idea, poor build quality.
 
IIRC Swan gas and other bog standard ones are not suitable for Turboflame lighters. The gas is not refined enough despite what it may say on the label. I tried it too and it's pants. I got the correct grade of gas from Maplins of all places and if you follow the Turboflame instructions to the letter then it works a treat. They need to be 'bled' of any residual gas before refilling.

Veeeerry Interesting: I have two Turboflames that were briliant when new but after refilling with Swan gas (following instructions) are a bit dodgy - not as good a flame.
 
Veeeerry Interesting: I have two Turboflames that were briliant when new but after refilling with Swan gas (following instructions) are a bit dodgy - not as good a flame.

Actually, my first turbo flame quit on me when the ignition clicker packed up after about 2 months while I was on deployment. Not HP! Sent it back with a snottagram when I got home on R&R and several months later a replacement appeared in the post. So far so good but I wouldn't buy another.
 
I couldn't even pretend not to have heard that the Turboflame had a doubtful reputation. I just wanted one, and for a short time it was okay, though the flame was gutless. But when the ignition stopped working - :disgust: This wasn't a prudent purchase. Nice idea, poor build quality.

Although it didn't cost much, I'm actually going to send it back to them for a refund. I have drained and filled it with good quality gas and it still doesn't work. I am getting sick of spending precious time on poor products.
 
Sorry if I've upset anyone. My OP was "Is there a windproof lighter that actually works?" I was asking about windproof lighters, not knives, copper tubes, blowtorches.
 
I got one from the local garage which worked fine until it ran out of gas. Although it has a filler point I've been unable to get any gas into it with the standard nozzle.
 
Sorry if I've upset anyone. My OP was "Is there a windproof lighter that actually works?" I was asking about windproof lighters, not knives, copper tubes, blowtorches.
Well, as a lighter the only good one is a Petrol Zippo, however for the task you are looking for it to perform, a lighter or flame is not the best tool. The flame will burn the rope material whereas a hot knife (hence the blowtorch or gas soldering iron/knife) melts the strands without mess or burning. It is also neater.
 
For cutting rope and sealing just heat a knife on the stove and cut with that

I got a decent flameproof lighter from a pound shop - still working well after a few months, and with Swan gas in it!
 
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