hddennis Posted November 29, 2008 Share Posted November 29, 2008 Docs Gal, Just a cobwebed memory on my part but I seem to remember this being used by a plumber years ago to melt lead used in sealing an old cast iron pipe repair. I'm positive it's a heater, just not sure if what I saw it used for was it's original purpose.Howard Dennis Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jscheib Posted November 30, 2008 Share Posted November 30, 2008 I would think it might have been fired by "white gas", and presurized by a hand pump, before portable propane became popular.I would not try to determine if it would work, as it could be damgerous (built before any sort of detailed safeguards).John Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
keiser31 Posted November 30, 2008 Share Posted November 30, 2008 Looks like an orchard heater to me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Bob Call Posted November 30, 2008 Share Posted November 30, 2008 Howard got it. It's a gasoline burner used to melt lead to join cast iron pipe joints. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Richard Lichtfel Posted November 30, 2008 Share Posted November 30, 2008 It is a white gas burning plumbers fire pot for melting lead. It should have a shield on top and the lead pot sat on the top of the burner. It can be used for melting lead for pouring cast iron lead joints or melting 60/40 lead for wiping joints in lead pipes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest simplyconnected Posted December 13, 2008 Share Posted December 13, 2008 Every house used "Bell & Spigot" joints for drains. Yes, you have a heater, and every plumber had one going all day long.They would stack the pipes, pack jute "rope" at the bottom of the bell using a thin chisel, then pour lead over the top. Lead shrinks, so they use the chisel again to expand the lead tightly against the sides. This takes quite a bit of lead to finish. (Far more than rifle rounds.) That's why you have so many bars of lead with the heater. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Richard Lichtfel Posted December 14, 2008 Share Posted December 14, 2008 We have been in the plumbing business since 1895 and have used many of these burners. We called them fire pots. I still have a couple of them. The propane lead pots made the white gas ones obsolite. You packed the bell with oakum that was hemp rope that had been creosoted and poured the lead on that, we then pounded down the lead with an inside and outside iron to tighted the joint. Horizontel joints had to be poured with a pouring rope to hold the lead in. The largest joint that I made was a 36 inch watermain. It took three of us several hours to complete the joint but it didn't leak with 85 psi.You should sell the fire pot and lead to someone that shoots black powder or makes lead fishing weights. It is a great tool for melting lead. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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