I'm in the second year of employing the best cheap method of manual ignition of my first-gen Whitfield free-standing stove from the early 1980s. It occurred to me while thinking about how to use wax to increase ignition temp and burning that the best type of paper to use is wax paper. Sure enough, it carries lots of clean-burning ash-less energy so I use it as a base with a half-a-handful of pellets on top and four mini pine cones on top of them. They are ash-less also. But to increase the flammability I squirt the pellets and then the pine-cones with a flammable oil.
Until recently I used pure odorless mineral oil (bought in a gallon @ about $16.00). Recently I found pure corn oil at the grocery store for only $8.00 per gallon. Knowing that oil is oil when it comes to burn-ability, I mixed it 50-50 with the mineral oil which drops the price to just $12.00 per gallon. see the photos and ignition video.
short Video: http://smg.photobucket.com/user/arnash/media/Facebook/000_1961_zps37899a93.mp4.html
I tear off about a foot of wax paper and then tear it into 8 sections (in half and in quarters) then scrunch them up length wise which allows air to pass through them.
I used to use a propane torch but it blows ash and smoke into the room since it has a strong wind velocity, so I switched back to a barbecue lighter alone before coming up with the wax paper idea. The paper ignites the oil, and the oil fire, which last longer that the quick-burning paper, then lights the pellets and the pine-cones which together create a nice hot fire to ignite the pellets that will soon be falling into the pot.
Until recently I used pure odorless mineral oil (bought in a gallon @ about $16.00). Recently I found pure corn oil at the grocery store for only $8.00 per gallon. Knowing that oil is oil when it comes to burn-ability, I mixed it 50-50 with the mineral oil which drops the price to just $12.00 per gallon. see the photos and ignition video.
short Video: http://smg.photobucket.com/user/arnash/media/Facebook/000_1961_zps37899a93.mp4.html
I tear off about a foot of wax paper and then tear it into 8 sections (in half and in quarters) then scrunch them up length wise which allows air to pass through them.
I used to use a propane torch but it blows ash and smoke into the room since it has a strong wind velocity, so I switched back to a barbecue lighter alone before coming up with the wax paper idea. The paper ignites the oil, and the oil fire, which last longer that the quick-burning paper, then lights the pellets and the pine-cones which together create a nice hot fire to ignite the pellets that will soon be falling into the pot.