paaiyan wrote:Steel wool catch on fire...
Right...
I don't believe I've ever seen steel catch fire.

"How to start a Fire with Steel Wool and a Battery"
[youtube][/youtube]
paaiyan wrote:Steel wool catch on fire...
Right...
I don't believe I've ever seen steel catch fire.
Yes, actually you have seen steel wool on fire... its called "rusting".paaiyan wrote:Steel wool catch on fire...
Right...
I don't believe I've ever seen steel catch fire.
Fiberglasspaaiyan wrote:They make glass wool?
Yup, using steel wool as anti-flame-suck-back system is only suited for people who have a strong wish to die.jimmy101 wrote: Using steel wool in an oxygen + hydrogen torch as a "anti-flame-suck-back" device is probably not a good idea. In a pure oxygen environment the steel wool will burn vigorously (and explosively if it is confined) if there is an ignition source. Glass wool might be a better idea. Best of all would be a water trap or bubbler.
Blowback that reached a cotton filled chamber containg pure oxygen would be a grenade.rp181 wrote:i think it might stand a chance, with the small dia. tube. For a hho torch, people use ball needle as the tip. They have bubblers and a chamber with a porous material in it, whats it for? Its right before nozzle, ive seen bronze wool, porous plastic and cotton. If you stuffed a bottle with cotton so the hydrogen and oxygen would have to force through, i think it could prevent or even slow a blowback.