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PLD Flame Butane Stick Cigarette Jet Torch Lighter - Sku# DTA04020000J

Sku: DTA04020000J
Price: $19.00

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Specifications:

  • Metal body reflecting perfect craftsmanship
  • Brand new muti-purpose cigarette lighter light 
  • This cigarette lighter light is easy to use
  • Melts copper, glass, gold, silver, tin, and aluminum
  • Butane cigarette lighters are made of material, durable
  • Twist bottom to increase/decrease flame output
  • Features child lock to prevent the ignition button from being pressed
  • Handy for hobby show, jewelry bench, or lab
  • Refills from standard butane torch lighters canister
  • This cigarette lighter light will give you so much convenience
  • The flame reaches up to 6.5 inches
  • Dimensions: 7.56 in x 1.3 in x 1.02 in (L x W x H)

Details:



  • This lighter features an easy to use flame. Great novelty cigarette lighter for smoking people





  • This butane cigarette lighter is great for hobby, lab or jewelry work. You can purchase for your friends

What is Butane?


  • Butane is a gaseous component of natural gas, much like gasoline is a component of crude oil. While petroleum products like gasoline are refined, natural gas products like butane are extracted. Butane can also be produced from crude oil, but in much smaller quantities. Butane is often added to regular gasoline to boost performance without creating a highly volatile product. Other common uses for butane include refrigeration, heating and fuel for cigarette lighters.
  • But first, a quick chemistry lesson may be helpful. Butane's chemical formula is C4H10, which means the butane molecule consists of four carbon atoms surrounded by ten hydrogen atoms to form a straight line. Imagine a four-segment carbon caterpillar with ten hydrogen legs to get a visual idea of a butane chain. This form of the colorless gas is technically called n-butane (the n stands for 'normal'). N-butane has a relative called isobutane, which is used primarily as a replacement for the refrigerant freon in refrigerator systems.
  • Butane is one of dozens of gases derived from raw natural gas. It is often combined with propane to form a new product called LPG, or Liquid Propane Gas. This is the bottled gas sold for use in camping stoves and outdoor gas-powered grills. Propane may deliver more energy than butane, but butane has a certain property that makes it ideal for containment. When butane is compressed, it becomes a liquid very quickly. Once it is released into the air, however, it reacts with an ignition source to become a highly flammable gas. Unlike some other natural gas derivatives, butane only releases carbon dioxide as a waste product, not carbon monoxide.
  • If you take a close look at a transparent cigarette lighter, you should see evidence of butane in its liquid state. Once the holder depresses a valve, the liquid butane loses its pressure and becomes gaseous again. The flame is similar to a burning candle, because butane is considered a 'paraffin' gas. The liquid form of butane remaining in the lighter is slowly expelled, much like the candle wick only draws enough liquid wax to maintain the flame.

About Butane Lighter Fluid



Butane is a naturally occurring component of natural gas that can be extracted and used for a number of household and industrial purposes. Handymen use butane torches for light soldering and plumbing tasks. Gourmet chefs may use a butane torch to melt the sugar topping on a fancy dessert. Campers often rely on butane to power their camp stoves. But for the nation's 45 million adult smokers, butane is one of the primary fluids they use to light up.

  • Identification: Butane lighter fluid is a chemical compound that is made up of four carbon atoms bound together with 10 hydrogen atoms. Its chemical formula is C4H10, and it refers to n-butane, or natural butane, as opposed to isobutane, a slightly different form of the gas that is used primarily as a refrigerant.
  • Function: In its natural state, butane is a highly flammable gas. In order to make it suitable for use in a lighter, butane gas is put under pressure where it converts to a liquid state. The butane lighter works by releasing the pressure on the containment compartment, allowing the liquid butane to revert back to its gaseous state. A spark from a lighter ignites the flammable gas, and a control valve provides a continuous flow of butane gas to fuel a flame.
  • Benefits: Unlike many other flammable gases that produce carbon monoxide when burned, the byproducts of burned butane are water vapor and carbon dioxide. Butane lighter fluid also does not give off the unpleasant odor commonly associated with lighters that use traditional lighter fluid. Many cigar and pipe smokers prefer butane because of the perception that lighting up with a butane lighter does not flavor the tobacco.
  • History: Although the cigar lighter dates back to the early 1800s when Johann Wolfgang Dobereiner introduced his hydrogen-powered version to the world, it was another century before the classic pocket lighter became a ubiquitous part of the consumer landscape. The windproof Zippo lighter, which used Naptha for fuel, became world-famous during World War II as GIs carried the handy device all over the world. Butane lighters, introduced in the 1930s, began to compete with Naptha-based lighters because they didn't require a wick, and they didn't give off the unpleasant odor that Naptha was known for.
  • Features: High-end butane lighters can cost several hundred dollars, while the ubiquitous BIC lighter can be bought at the corner convenience store for less than a dollar. Colibri, ST Dupont, Zippo, Lotus, Tonino, Corona and Dunhill are only a few of the major manufacturers that use butane lighter fluid to power their lighters.

Butane Lighter Instructions:

Many of the more decorative lighters that are given as gifts are fueled with butane instead of the more common lighter fluid. Butane is a gas instead of a liquid, so filling the butane lighters is a different type of procedure. Many people are unfamiliar with this type of lighter, but you can refill your butane lighter quickly and safely with just a few steps.

  • Wait for your lighter to cool before filling it. If you have recently used the lighter, allow it to sit for at least 5 minutes to allow the gases to cool.
  • Turn the flame down to the smallest size. Each lighter is different, but you will have some type of adjustment wheel or screw that controls the size of the flame. Dial this to the smallest end that you have.
  • Hold the lighter away from your body. Push a small screwdriver into the filling valve. This will release any air that is trapped in the tank, which would make the lighter malfunction or not work at all. Do this repeatedly until you don't hear any hissing noise coming from the lighter.
  • Hold the lighter upside down with the refill valve facing up. Shake the can of butane five times. Place the butane can nozzle over the refill valve and press down on the can. This will allow the gas to move from the can into the lighter's tank. Hold the butane can on the lighter for 5 seconds, then remove the can.
  • Lay the lighter in a safe place for 3 to 4 minutes until it returns to room temperature. Flick the lighter to light it when it has warmed up, then adjust the flame to your desired height.

Package Included:

  • 1 x Flame Butane Stick Jet Torch Lighter Silver

 

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