Aladdin Oil Lamps
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- čas přidán 4. 10. 2023
- It's easy to see why Aladdin's Lincoln Drape lamps are favorites of collectors worldwide. The sweeping, dramatic font designs give them a Civil War-era flair and a valuable, antique feel. This design still looks stunning (and works beautifully!) in any modern home and features a clear glass font that's made near our store.
America's only USA-made glass lamp is made in Ohio
Bright as electric
Three to five nights usage on one fill
The only oil lamp that is bright enough to read by without eye strain
Never a dead battery!
Silent in use
Only oil lamp with a mantle that doesn't need pumping
Easiest to use mantle light on the market
6x brighter and uses 1/4 of fuel, compared to other oil lamps
Proven in use since 1908. Millions sold!
Burn time: 10-12 hours per fill
Fuel capacity: 32 oz
24"H
Shop this staple for the homestead here: www.lehmans.com/product/aladd... - Jak na to + styl
I completely loved that lamp, but I really need a durable one for taking camping. It would be amazing beyond words to have the mechanism within a conventional type of durable body.
Great video. Good information. Thank you
And what about the kerosene lamp?
Can you burn olive oil in this lamp ?
Nope, there is Aladdin brand oil that I believe is the best for it. You can use 1-K kerosene with no dyes or klean-heat too but there is more smell potentially and klean heat can burn a bit hotter.
@@SeaShroom950what about sunflower oil?
@@user-hr3bk1fz4u sunflower oil and other natural oils won't work for a few reasons. The big two that I could think are viscosity of the fluid and flash point. Sunflower oil is made primarily out of linoleic and oleic fatty acids versus the c9-c16 hydrocarbons that kerosene is made of. Those fatty acids and hydrocarbons are almost identical but due to some unsaturated bonds, longer carbon chain, and end groups on the fatty acids, it is about 30x 'thicker' than kerosene which would make it harder for the special wick to work as intended. And sunflower oil has a flashpoint that is quite a bit higher than kerosene meaning it's harder to burn and would throw off the combustion process that the lamp is tuned too for kerosene usage. The other thing I'm speculating more about I would also guess the natural oils would soot more and damage the mantle easier because of the lower flash point and such. I decided to nerd out a little about that since it's interesting but overall, only use the Aladdin oil or 1-k kerosene.
@@SeaShroom950 thank you so much for this information!🤍
When is somebody going to use that type of burner in a lantern? Imagine a kerosene mantel lantern you could use outside.