Creative Hobbies wholesale Lot of 4 Mason Jar Oil Lamp Burners -Convert your Mason Jars into Unique Oil Lamp conversation pieces! This wholesale priced lot is for 4 brand new Mason Jar oil lamp burner / chimney holders. These brand new Oil Lamp Burners feature bright brass plated finish, 6" long x 3/4" wide cotton wick and adjusting knob on the side. Each burner comes completely assembled with a 2-3/4" inside diameter Mason Jar Lid that fits regular width mason jars. These burners hold standard 3" dia. bottom fitter glass chimneys. The mounting collar fits regular mouth Mason Jars and is 2-3/4" inside diameter. The bottom collar can also unscrew if needed (see last picture above) and when you take off that collar you have male threads 1-3/16" in diameter. These burners also feature a side knob to raise or lower the wick to desired level. Use with standard lamp oils only.
C**T
Mason Jar Oil Burner Chimney Holder
This is perfect for all you canning jar crafters ! Works great and holds a 3" fitter globe/shade for oil lamps.Turns any small mouth canning jar into a great sturdy oil lamp. Would reccomend also for all you preppers out there.Try on a handled canning jar, now it's easy to carry and move about, looks great too. Puts together in a twist ! You do needa longer wick than given though as it does not reach the bottom of a pint jar.
T**G
Power Loss Back-Ups
Used these before. Set these up with plain chimneys & attached to "redneck" handled pint jars. Store them with 12oz capped bottles of kerosene for quick initial fill & use. These aren't made for carrying around much due to the burner not being sealed. They will leak fuel if handled carelessly or tipped. Will NOT replace a kerosene lantern for outdoor use. Throws enough light off to cook by or do low light activities inside. Be sure to get quality wick material in long lengths to custom cut for the various size jars. Careful handling & these burners last through repeated lightings. Only problem I've ever had with ANY oil lamp was while using liquid paraffin oil while power was out in winter. Temps inside house got down where the paraffin oil solidified. Once warmed up by wood stove, no problems. Kerosene might stink, but it lights even when below freezing. These are plated steel, so there is a chance of spot rust. One lamp I saw was a old blue glass round quart jar. The old timer put a inch of lead birdshot in bottom of jar to add weight to the base. These do make interesting gifts.
A**R
Great product
Very nice works well attached to handled mason jar for hurricane lamp. Makes 4 hurricane lamps and the make it yourself price is cheaper than store bought. Would buy more if they were in stock.
L**A
Handly little appliance.
These chimney holders are a great way to use mason jars as oil lamps! Put some stones/marbles in the bottom of your jar to add some weight so as to prevent tipping. You will need to purchase glass chimneys to make your lamp complete. The wick length is satisfactory for a pint jar; short for a quart. You can also purchase rolls of wicking -- available here on Amazon thru Idaho Supply.
P**O
These jar lids are great. They arrived quickly and packed securely
How simply ingenious! These jar lids are great. They arrived quickly and packed securely. We filled our mason jars with oil and had them all lit. I think they are great without a chimney but got out voted. Most glass chimneys will fit. I intend to purchase more of these before winter.
O**S
They fit and are low cost. The wicks are ...
They fit and are low cost. The wicks are short but they all are when new. I always replac them with new long wicks.
A**R
Build your own Mason Jar oil lamps and enjoy the light.
This product arrived securely packaged. Every burner fit properly and made assembly of the lamps virtually effortless. I would recommend this to anyone who needs emergency lighting for a power outage or someone who just plain loves the soft light of oil lamps.
G**V
easy, works
Cheap, easy, works. Pieced together 4 lamps. Burners, jars, chimneys. Keep one full of jetfuel. Use it when the power has gone out from storms. Enough light to see and a little heat to make you feel better. Welcome to America. About 100 years ago.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago