View Full Version : Coleman Premium Dual Fuel Lantern
Greetings!
Just curious to know if any of you have experience with these Coleman lanterns? Specifically are the following fuel(s) compatible for use with said lantern?
TruFuel (expired domain)
VP-SEF (http://www.vp-sef.com/)
Stihl MotoMix (http://www.stihlusa.com/products/technology/stihl-motomix/)
Primarily using the Coleman Camp Fuel with this Coleman Dual Fuel lantern. I know it'll also run on Unleaded Gasoline which I have not yet tried. But since it can do so, I was wondering about the above three (3) fuel types since I have them in my garage.
Please advise!
Nobody has a Coleman Premium Dual Fuel Lantern or similar?
Anyways, I saw this on YouTube where Oil Lamp is used as "fuel" for this specific lantern.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_A6w8Tkm3Fs
With that in mind, I was wondering if it can be done with the Oil Lamp maybe possible with the Fuel-Mix?
I have a lantern, and used both fuels, in single burner stoves. Two of them I've mixed unleaded with Coleman fuel (white gas/ napath) all the time. The third more true multi-fuel stove, I've used, DF2, JP8 straight and mixed used daily for 4 -5 month in 03-04. I have to change generator for gasoline or Coleman fuel. I haven't used the lantern in few years though. The main reason I got them. I've carried one in a rucksack for few years (Stove) sucked for weigh but great for heating, water and food in cold weather. All worked better with coleman fuel but costs to much now.
I have one and it works great on White Gas and Unleaded Gas. I've not tried the fuels you are posting about and I've not used it in ages because it is heavy.
I have one and never had a problem with it. It sat in the closet for 8 years and then I pulled it out last August to use it twice. While I have used unleaded gas several times, I usually use Coleman fuel. The adjustable light output is a nice touch when needed.
Coleman has parts to convert some of their lanterns to run kerosene. They run a different generator and a cup to fill with kerosene and light it to heat up the generator. Look up the parts on Colemans web site.
CLHC,
I don't know how I missed this post. I have a Coleman dual fuel lantern and camp stove. They are both 21 years old. Using the Coleman fuel the lantern burns brighter and the stove burns much hotter than using gasoline. Naptha is supposed to be the same as Coleman fuel but cheaper and can be bought in 5 gallon containers at paint supply outlets. Something I need to take advantage of. I have countless hours on my Coleman's, they have been fantastic. I have not tried any other fuels in them.
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Thanks for the responses! Still using the Coleman Camp Fuel just to be sure since I plan on keeping and using the Dual Fuel Lantern for a long time. This one sure is a keeper!
Got the Coleman Dual Fuel Lantern lit this evening down the hall:
http://i987.photobucket.com/albums/ae360/chc_hmc/IMG_3405_zpsf89f4fe3.jpg
They put out a metric S&&t ton of light, I have had em and used them extensively, as in only lighting for 7 months straight. They are worth the money, just make sure you have extra mantles and globes as the globes break easy. I ran it mostly on coleman fuel, but the times I did use unleaded it seemed a lot brighter to me.
Love it, thanks for the share. How come I missed this post? As for the best dual fuel generator (https://handtoolexpert.com/best-dual-fuel-generator/) , I think the choice is huge nowadays, I personally tend to Westinghouse WGen3600DF as it has excellent run time and great control panel, just my opinion.
Whoah forgot about this thread. Yes indeed, my Colemans are still going! Only change outs have been the Mantles.
Up date on use.
For first 5 months of this year I used mine quite often at land I bought used for light and cooking. The only electric I had was my generators for months. So I got a lot of use out of them. The funny part of gas lanterns is if you have spare mantels you won't need them, first time without them they break. After I finish building rest of my deck, I'll probably use them for more cooking, better to fry food outside than in a R.V.
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