Thanks Kevin,
I like how your burner nicely spreads the heat. I often wonder about the intensity of some of the small diameter burners. Once I had to replace the bottom in one of my kettles after the sheet had work hardened (think that's the right name for the phenomenon?) Tried to weld the hair cracks, but while welding one I could see about 10 more developing!!! I ended up welding the bottom of a keg onto what was left of the original bottom.
I don't completely understand the fender washer fire spreader bit. Is that the one on top of the centre tube? You raise that washer a bit above the centre pipe to get a little gas flowing towards the 6 arms to get the flame to spread to all of them?
Is it a bolt and nut system w the nut welded onto the top of the centre pipe and to raise it you screw out the bolt a bit?
I also wondered if to make the welding of the arms to the centre pipe a bit easier it would be an option to give at least the upper portion of that pipe a larger diameter? It would give more room / manoeuvrability to weld the beads there. I guess in that case the flame spreader would have to be made accordingly larger?
Although it looks like you are getting a very clean burn, would trying to make to create a vortex in the centre pipe be beneficial?
It's nice to be able to ask such questions!
BTW: for many years I have been using various kinds of burners and controls from water heaters and furnaces. I think over in Europe more people are doing it and if I am right Boerderij Kabouter may actually have an article about that on his website.
I haven't come across anybody who's doing that here.
It's nice to have the pilot and safety features that come with that. I myself wouldn't trust a ring or other burner that doesn't have either of the above.
For my BK for example I use the whole unit from a water heater, including the built-in probe and thermostat. I simply welded a 3/4" nipple onto the keggle at the right height in the side to get the burner at the right distance from the bottom, screwed a 3/4" connector onto it and screwed the probe in the connector. The thermostat needed tweaking for higher temps, but that was easy enough.
I hope I am not sidetracking here, I wondered about starting a specific thread...