|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
For other uses, see Blowtorch (disambiguation).
The meaning of "blowtorch" varies between Britain and the USA. Name usageUSA usageIn USA word usage "blowtorch" is a common name for types of liquid or gaseous fuel burner used for heating:
In technical or trade usage, modern torches are never called "blowtorches"; they are instead referred to by the type of fuel they consume. For example, a "propane torch", "acetylene-air torch", or "oxyacetylene torch". Some torches are also named for their intended use: "cutting torch" and "plumber's torch" for example. Informed USA users of torches would only say "blowtorch" for the sort that burns a liquid fuel using a vaporizer. British usageIn British word usage, the types with the built-in fuel tank are usually called a blowlamp, and "blowtorch" can mean an oxy-gas torch, usually the cutting type. DescriptionThey produce a much larger softer flame than an oxyacetylene torch and are used for low temperature applications - soldering, brazing, melting roof tar, or pre-heating large castings before welding, such as for repairing cast-iron cylinder heads, and for other direct rapid applications of heat such as in cooking. They cannot be used for welding, but find many other uses, not least because in their simplest form of a disposable canister feeding a hand-held torch they are very cheap and highly portable, and because the LPG fuel is very cheap in comparison to acetylene and oxygen. Flame gunA flame gun is a large type of blowlamp, with built-in fuel tank, used for various purposes: weed control by controlled burn methods, melting snow and ice off walk and driveways in the winter, starting a fire, etc. It is commonly confused in word usage with a flamethrower. Images
External linksSee also |
| All Right Reserved © 2007, Designed by Stylish Blog. |