The colored flames are produced by using metalic salts, e.g. copper salts produce green. The smoke does not change color.
eZAK wrote: Her is a thought;What if one were to wire a colored grain of wheat bulb that is placed inside the smoke stack.A larger but simular device is used in theatrics to produce the appearence of colored smoke.
Her is a thought;
What if one were to wire a colored grain of wheat bulb that is placed inside the smoke stack.
A larger but simular device is used in theatrics to produce the appearence of colored smoke.
That might work, it would make a good project.
One thing about smoke is that you can't get different colors !! I talked to the makers of "Super Smoke", the people that make a smoke oil for full scale aerobatic planes & model planes & they said only on some turbine engines is it possible to get a color in the smoke system so far !! Any colored smoke you see at Airshows is from flares !
Thanks, John
In prototype practice, white smoke was indicative of a clean burn, as Chuck noted. Why would you want smoke of a different color (black), which would only demonstrate that your engine crew is doing a sloppy job?
And my guess is that any color additive's that might be used in model train smoke--to make it black, for example--would probably result in eventually coating your walls, furniture, and layout with a nasty, hard-to-get-rid-of film.
pbjwilson wrote: jaabat wrote: Andrew,A squirt of teheratat into the locos stack will produce colored smoke. I get mine from a fellow named Moe Howard. Jim Hey, that same guy sold me that stuff and said it would grow hair.
jaabat wrote: Andrew,A squirt of teheratat into the locos stack will produce colored smoke. I get mine from a fellow named Moe Howard. Jim
Andrew,
A squirt of teheratat into the locos stack will produce colored smoke. I get mine from a fellow named Moe Howard.
Jim
jaabat wrote:Andrew,A squirt of teheratat into the locos stack will produce colored smoke. I get mine from a fellow named Moe Howard. Jim
That is is a great examination of the process, Chuck.
I did not realize that the real "smoke" is more of an atmopheric and optical effect than I first thought.
I knew that light conditions did change the appearance of O Gauge Smoke.
Andrew
Watch my videos on-line at https://www.youtube.com/user/AndrewNeilFalconer
dbaker48 wrote:OK, Jim... I'll bite, is that for real? What color doe it produce, gray, black?
Is it for real?! You tell me, Don.
Link to Moe Howard
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
Don
Smoke fluid produces a mostly white vapor when heated in the smoke unit.
I have seen and used scented smoke.
Does anyone know of smoke fluid that produces colors?
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