Re: [MV] Heater, Immersion, Liquid Fuel Fired

From: Jeanne Lacourse (cckw@mediaone.net)
Date: Sun Nov 19 2000 - 16:25:42 PST


I have 2 of them, one M series I presume and the slightly smaller one in
diameter that fits my WW2 water buffalo. They work quite well. Make sure you
use the smoke stack provided which is quite tall as it provides the draft.

Steve AKA Dr Deuce

----- Original Message -----
From: ljh <ljh@public.xm.fj.cn>
To: Military Vehicles Mailing List <mil-veh@mil-veh.org>
Sent: Sunday, November 19, 2000 6:55 PM
Subject: Re: [MV] Heater, Immersion, Liquid Fuel Fired

> Jim and List:
>
> I have also seen the immersion heater used at rally campsites to produce
> hot water for of course cleaning your mess kits and also that hot shower
> in the field. They go great when you bring your duce, followed by your
> 400 gal "Buffalo", fully loaded with goodies to sell and trade.
>
> I wouldn't pass them up.
>
> Best Regards
> Tim Conover
> AMOY, China.
>
>
>
> Jim Rice wrote:
> >
> > Immersion heaters are almost a relic from the past.....gone the way of
the
> > mess kit, which they supported.
> >
> > The immersion heater was used to heat large trash cans full of water.
There
> > was a series of three or four (I don't recall) cans. When you finished
> > eating from your mess kit, you went to the cleaning station. You simply
> > scrapped any remaining food into a regular trash bin. Then you dipped
your
> > messkit, with canteen cup, fork, knife, spoon all dangling from the
handle
> > of the mess kit into the can of very hot (if not boiling water).
Typically,
> > a large brush (same type the army used for cleaing toilets, go figure)
was
> > available to give the kit a quick, cursory scrub. You then progressed
to a
> > second and third (and I think a fourth) station of hot/boiling water.
By
> > the time you completed all the stations, you had a clean/sanitized
messkit
> > with very little effort.
> >
> > Of course, most kids in the Army today have never eaten from a messkit.
The
> > messhalls use paper/plastic products exclusively. I think the last time
I
> > ate from a mess kit and used a line of immersion heaters at a messhall
was
> > in 1983 at Fort Devens, Mass.
> >
> > About the only other use I've seen for immersion heaters since was to
clean
> > gasmasks. Again, the same concept applies. Several stations of dipping
> > results in a clean mask.....of course, all filters, valves and other
> > removable parts were taken out first.
> >
> > Hope this helps.
> >
> > Jim Rice
> > Immersion Heater Owner....never used.
> >
> >
_________________________________________________________________________
> > Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at
http://www.hotmail.com.
> >
> > Share information about yourself, create your own public profile at
> > http://profiles.msn.com.
> >
> > ===Mil-Veh is a member-supported mailing list===
> > To unsubscribe, send e-mail to: <mil-veh-off@mil-veh.org>
> > To switch to the DIGEST mode, send e-mail to
<mil-veh-digest@mil-veh.org>
> > To reach a human, contact <ack@mil-veh.org>
>
> ===Mil-Veh is a member-supported mailing list===
> To unsubscribe, send e-mail to: <mil-veh-off@mil-veh.org>
> To switch to the DIGEST mode, send e-mail to <mil-veh-digest@mil-veh.org>
> To reach a human, contact <ack@mil-veh.org>



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Dec 03 2000 - 20:29:55 PST