@BenzDr
I was just waiting for somebody to care enough to ask
Parts Needed (Hardware store, Home Depot, Harbor Freight)
1 - 1 gallon paint can
1 - 1/4 hose adapter
1 - 10 ft tubing (or what ever)
1 - Male air compressor fitting
4 - Grommets
1 - pack of incense (Dollar Store)
1 - Aluminum foil
1 - Makeshift stand (wood, metal, whatever is lying around)
1 - Baby oil
Battery powered upgrade extra parts needed.
1 - pack of Kanthal wire
1 - Tiki torch wick
2 - Bolts
4 - Nuts
2 - Grommets
2 - Battery connectors
2 - Connecting wires
So far I only built the "incense" version. It did the job so I never got around to building the "battery" version.
Warning! The "incense" version has an ignition source in the can. Be very careful !!!!!!!!!!!!!
I used 10 feet of tubing so the paint can was outside the garage.
Build Directions.
- Drill holes in can and can lid
- Screw in air compressor and hose fittings using grommets to seal
- Connect air compressor to lower fitting
- Connect tubing to lid fitting
- Connect other end of tubing to fitting of your choice on engine. For my purpose I removed brake booster hose from intake manifold and attached there.
- Used ~10 pieces of incense (6" length). Wrap in foil around weight to make stand. Use whatever you might have around.
Use Directions
- With your incense stand out of the can, light the bundle, put some drops of baby oil of the incense to add even more smoke.
- Place incense stand in can
- Seal/close lid
- Turn on air compressor about 3-5 PSI (you will have to adjust to find your happy spot.
- Wait for smoke to come out of tubing
- Connect to car
- Look for leaks
The last picture is using the same paint can with some modification. The idea is that the power source (car battery) heats up the Kanthal wire around the tiki wick that is soaked in baby oil. You will need to adjust the number of coils to get it correct. Try 9 - 12 coils first. Less coils will make the wire hotter and burn up your wick. Too many coils will not get hot enough to make smoke.