Anchor 909

Discussion in 'Pressure Lamp Discussion Forum' started by Seamanjive, Oct 21, 2020.

  1. Seamanjive

    Seamanjive Subscriber

    Offline
    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2019
    Messages:
    204
    Location:
    London, England
    Gentlemen
    Last winter I acquired a beaten up Anchor 909. After working on it the lamp was definitely bright but was a pain to ignite, the quick start was a liability and the pump mech was a pain. It went on the back shelf.
    After further recent fettiling, no new parts but lots of adjustment and, most probably, more experience on my part...it fired-up easily on the quick-start, no leaks, great light intensity.
    But...after about ten minutes it sooted the glass, dimmed, blews flame outside mantle and the J tube glowed red hot.
    Tightened the nipple and all good...except now a little blue/ yellow flame from the vaporiser flange where is widens before going into the Preston loop.
    Can it be sealed - there is nothing to tighten? Is it dangerous? The lantern burns just fine. Is the expense of a new upper vaporiser tube worth it?
    As ever, I look forward to your wisdom and advice!
     
  2. Seamanjive

    Seamanjive Subscriber

    Offline
    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2019
    Messages:
    204
    Location:
    London, England
    20201017_182111.jpg 909 on the right, 950 on one left
     
  3. JEFF JOHNSON

    JEFF JOHNSON United Kingdom Subscriber

    Offline
    Joined:
    Nov 28, 2010
    Messages:
    16,634
    Location:
    Shetland Islands UK..
    If the vapouriser itself is leaking, then it can be repaired by brazing.
     
  4. Seamanjive

    Seamanjive Subscriber

    Offline
    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2019
    Messages:
    204
    Location:
    London, England
    I see...and that would be a brazed repair rather than solder...which would run out at operating temperature?
     
  5. Henry Plews

    Henry Plews Subscriber

    Offline
    Joined:
    Jun 23, 2014
    Messages:
    3,050
    Location:
    North Yorkshire
    Only you will know if a new vapouriser (available from www.Base-camp.co.uk) is worth the expense.

    Personally, I'd fix the leak with silver solder but that's because I already have silver solder rods and an appropriate flux.

    Silver solder comes in different grades with melting temperatures between 650 and 720 degrees C.
    Silver Solder & Braze, the difference and what you need to know!
     
  6. Seamanjive

    Seamanjive Subscriber

    Offline
    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2019
    Messages:
    204
    Location:
    London, England
    Would this little kit do the trick...avail on the evil bay for 6 quid. Screenshot_20201022-093612_eBay.jpg Screenshot_20201022-093626_eBay.jpg
     
  7. Adrian Romania

    Offline
    Joined:
    Nov 7, 2019
    Messages:
    160
    Location:
    Bucharest
    I'm pretty much on the same boat (so to speak) looking to fix a hairline crack on the Preston loop of a Sea Anchor clone. Looks like the manufacturing quality of the evaporators on these Chinese clones is very low.
     
  8. Seamanjive

    Seamanjive Subscriber

    Offline
    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2019
    Messages:
    204
    Location:
    London, England
    Many people have doubts about the quality of these brands...but, properly maintained, they are ok. I can try the repair, which is about half the cost of a direct replacement upper vaporiser. The new vaporiser tube obviously includes the Preston loop (not full of carbon!) and a new nipple so really it's a no brainer! But there is something about fixing it yourself!
    What would you do?
     
  9. Adrian Romania

    Offline
    Joined:
    Nov 7, 2019
    Messages:
    160
    Location:
    Bucharest
    I would repair it, yours doesn't have any structural damage, just a poor solder job.
     
  10. MYN

    Offline
    Joined:
    Feb 28, 2018
    Messages:
    3,861
    Location:
    Malaysia
    If you've subjected a coked-up Preston loop to repetitive heat and quench earlier, chances are, it might develop a leak, especially on the brazed sections between the loop and the straight part.
    You'd need to braze it up again, if you don't have a spare again.
    Some practice required too, if you've not done it before. Of course, the proper torch, silver solder and flux all make a big difference on the job.
     

Share This Page