![]() ![]() Oh, the streets of Rome are filled with rubble My favourite version is the cover by Bob Dylan's backing band, The Band, on their album 'Cahoots'. "When I paint my masterpiece" it'll surely be with the startling hues of that underburning outer cap. Knowing the outer cap was already 'destroyed' in Burmos instruction terms, I let it get hotter and hotter, but shut it down before meltdown occurred It went into underburn easily though, by pressurising the stove with the priming charge still lit, igniting the jet of vapourised fuel below the burner Much to my surprise, the cap enabled a silent burner to fire up reasonably well ![]() I decided to use the Colosseum outer cap to stage a photoshoot of underburning in action. How had it got like that? 'Underburning', or 'lighting back' as these Burmos stove instructions referred to it was the cause, and not merely the passage of time as with the Colosseum and as a backdrop for Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck during their Roman Holiday He maybe had grand ruins like the Colosseum in mind and so did I when I looked at this burner cap. "The streets of Rome are filled with rubble" Bob Dylan sang. A stove came my way complete with this sorry relic of a silent burner cap, as bad a case of the consequences of 'underburning' as I've ever seen ![]()
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