spridgets
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: more brit terms

To: lmyer@qtm.net
Subject: Re: more brit terms
From: as@boris.umds.ac.uk (A.D.Smith)
Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 15:24:31 GMT
Cc: spridgets@Autox.Team.Net
Reply-to: as@boris.umds.ac.uk (A.D.Smith)
Sender: owner-spridgets@Autox.Team.Net
   >>>From: Les Myer <lmyer@qtm.net>

   >>>Aha!  Something that makes sense!  In the UK, spirits must mean alcohol 
and
   >>>thus methylated spirits must mean methanol.  This would burn much better
   >>>than ethanol.  However, why methanol would need to be denatured is beyond 
me
   >>>- ya really don't want to drink it,

Methylated spirits (UK now) is ethanol, with some methanol added to make it 
unfit
for drinking, and so not taxed as such.  Given that drinking an ethanol / 
methanol 
mix isn't good for you, it also almost always has some purple dye stuff added 
that's 
meant to make it taste horrible, so you don't actually fancy drinking it 
anyways.  
Of course, it is seriously cheap, and some folks have been known to drink it, 
with 
the expected result.

So, if I'm getting the picture now, 
        "denatured (US)" == "methylated (UK)" == "made unfit for drinking 
(anywhere)"

Anyways, it burns just fine, in a burner designed for it, of course.  

You can get it to burn just as it comes too, if you pour some on the garage 
floor
and chuck a match onto it, it burns fairly slowly, non explosively, and makes a 
nice
blue flame.  Apparently it used to be a favourite kids trick to burn small pools
of it in one hand, and then drop the whole lot before it burnt down to skin 
level.
Never tried myself.

It's also used over here in those little model steam engines, in burners for 
heating
up those stone things you use for cooking at the table (don't know what you 
call 
those in the US, in France it's a "pierrade"), and (with a wick) in little 
spirit
lamps you can get to give to people for Christmas and stuff.

Andy


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>