mainly because of the smoke when firing up , the smell and the mess.
If you are getting smoke and mess using diesel, then you are not doing something correctly.
I don't have smoke or mess.
I use a siphon-nozzle burner.
The drip style burners can make smoke, and puddle fuel in the bottom of the furnace, etc., which I why I don't use them.
As far as smell, I can't smell diesel, but my wife can, so I guess my sense of smell is gone.
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This photo is right after the compressed air and diesel have been turned on, but before adding combustion air.
There are flames, but they are blue/yellow, and so not really very visible.
No smoke though.
This photo is a few seconds later when the combusion air blower is turned on.
Large yellow flames for a few seconds, and then the flames settle into the furnace.
Again, no smoke.
The large flames are the cardboard under the crucible burning, along with the paper towels that are in the bottom of the furace as a fire starter.
The cardboard prevents the crucible from sticking to the plinth.
I don't do any sort of incremental ramping up of the blower; it is full power all at once, and as soon as you close the lid, you can begin the melting process.
This is the furnace about 60 seconds after starting, and it is operating at about 2.7 gal/hr diesel.
You can only see the slightest hint of flame inside the furnace.
I am in the process of swinging the lid closed.
And here is the furnace operating, melting gray iron.
There is no smoke before, during, or after operation of the furnace.
Diesel burns very cleanly.
The infrared heat coming out of an open furnace when it is at maximum temperature is most impressive.
The video makes it look rather tame.
I hold up a refrigerator shelf as a shield, so that my faceshield does not melt when I bend over to look into the lid opening.
Edit:
The only way my next door neighbor can tell I am running the furnace is due to the low frequency roar/rumble.
I have since added rubber pads under the wheels, to stop transmission of the rumble.
I am planning on locating the blower remotely inside the shop, so that will further reduce the noise.
I am aware of one individual who added a noise reduction stack, about 8 feet tall, lined with ceramic insulation, and that worked very well with reducing the roar. His neighbor was complaining. He also installed his blower in a box.
His furnace is extremly quiet now, and far less noisy than a lawnmower.