Here is another post for fellow MYOG fire lovers or pyromaniacs.
For some time I have used waste oil as a supplement to wood sticks to fire small tent stoves for winter backpacking. Oil is energy-rich and very compact for backpacking. It adds to the vigour of the combustion and extends the ‘burn-time’ for wet and frozen found wood. However, when the combustion was transitioned to oil only, the combustion became disappointingly dirty and inefficient.
As an experiment, I made a miniature smudge pot (134g) that I connected to a roll-up stove pipe. Initially, I had failures, due to my misunderstanding, of the principles of its operation. Now, It burns sump oil cleanly to provide strong infrared heating for a small winter tent. The throttle plate that covers the big hole in the oil pot is critical to setting the correct fuel-air mixture for this clean, hot and efficient combustion.
The heater burns ~140-240g of oil per hour, depending upon the desired heat output. The photo above shows the heater set to run at the low rate while the one below is at the highest rate respectively. The air admission rate delicately controls the burn rate through the adjustable throttle plate.
The burner was primarily designed to burn sump oil. However, it can also cleanly burn tea-candle wax, used vegetable oil, plastic from milk bottles and even wood chips etc. Very different throttle settings are needed to optimise the clean combustion of each fuel type.
I don't have an accurate measure of the temperature, but the top of the burn tube (that is not the hottest part) melted aluminium (MP ~600C) so it provides lovely radiant heat for winter warmth. It is not functional for cooking, but that may come in the next iteration if the clean burning can be maintained.
This little video below probably best describes the heater's performance.
The burner start-up requires a considerable heat input so that the burner can get hot enough to feed back sufficient heat to sustain the oil pyrolysis or vapourisation. Burning trips of wax-soaked egg cartons can provide sufficient heat energy for this start-up as demonstrated in the video below.
For more details, please see https://timtinker.com/micro-oil-heater-for-a-small-tent/
Tim