what happens if i put butane fuel into a zippo lighter?
my zippo lighter is out of gas and i have a butane fuel.. is it gonna work or is it gonna like explode?
You could likely get a case of frostbite from the evaporating butane. If you strike an arc before the butane diffuses completely you could get an explosion.
The cigar ratings supplied by publications like Cigar Magazine and Cigar Aficionado form an important part of the modern cigar industry. For cigar smokers, these ratings provide guidance in a crowded market.
As pressed-for-time moviegoers may look to Roger Ebert for guidance at the multiplex, smokers use the magazines’ ratings to cut down on their in-store browsing time. For cigar makers, meanwhile, the ratings can be the touch of life – or the kiss of death. When Cigar Aficionado gave a high rating to a Fuente Spanish Lonsdale cigar, the magazine’s imprimatur helped to cause a run on the brand, rendering it scarce and highly sought-after and increasing the profile of Fuente’s cigars in general. Every cigar maker covets a 90-or-higher rating from these influential judges.
But where do these numbers actually come from? For staffers at Cigar Aficionado, the reviewing process starts at the store. While music and book reviewers are often given free “review copies” of CDs or books (a practice that makes things convenient for the reviewer, but also diminishes his or her independence), Cigar Aficionado tries to buy cigars at close to retail prices.
This leads to big cigar bills for the magazine – but it also means the cigars they review are as much like the ones you buy at the store as is possible. (Unlike CDs or books, of course, every cigar is slightly different in composition and taste.) Sometimes, if a cigar is hard to find in stores, the magazine will request “review cigars”; ditto for cases when the magazine is trying to preview a cigar before it hits stores.
The members of the panel – all of them longstanding magazine staffers – are told nothing about the identity, price range, source, or country of origin of the cigar. A “tasting coordinator” – not a member of the panel – removes the cigar’s band so that it cannot be identified by the panel’s members.
The blank, anonymous cigar is then assigned a number so that its identity can be retrieved after it’s rated. The members of the tasting panel then retire, separately, to their offices to smoke the cigars without consulting each other. Each member of the panel assigns the cigar a certain number of points, based on its performance in any of four categories.
First of all, cigars are rated by APPEARANCE and CONSTRUCTION. Is the cigar visually pleasing? Is the wrapper smooth, or wadded-looking? Is it moist to the touch or dry? Does it stay firm? Is it veiny or soggy? After all, a great-tasting cigar that wilts the minute you take it out of the box, or looks too unappetizing to be placed in someone’s mouth, does smokers no good. Cigars can win up to 15 points in this category for being well-made and attractive.
Secondly, of course, the cigar is rated on its FLAVOR – a category that carries with it 25 of the possible 100 points. Who needs a good-looking but brackish cigar? Cigars should not taste bitter or leave a nasty aftertaste. Both taste and aftertaste should be smooth but full, complicated, and rich.
A maximum of 25 points can be won for various qualities ranged together under the general heading of SMOKING CHARACTERISTICS. How does it burn? Is it hard to light? Does it burn one-sidedly? Will the smoke burn your mouth, or feel cool and comfortable as it should? How hard do you have to pull to get a mouthful? All these questions and more are considered.
Finally, the tasters each give a score (up to 35 points) for OVERALL IMPRESSION. (Flavor counts most here.) Is the cigar good, bad – or great? And the question utmost in any dedicated smoker’s mind – is it worth the money? The panel’s various scores in each category are averaged and a final score is the result.
Ratings, of course, are always subjective, depending on individuals’ taste – even if those individuals have well-developed, highly educated tastes. Your mileage may vary. For any smoker, the ultimate authority should always be your own tastebuds!
About the Author:
CigarFox
provides you the opportunity to build your own sampler of the finest cigars that include cigar brands like Montecristo, Romeo & Julieta, H Upmann, Macanudo, Cohiba, Gurkha and many more. Choose from more than 1000 different brands! Other cigar products include cigar humidors, cigar boxes, and cigar accessories like Zippo Lighters.
Many people say that weddings are meant for the bride. But one should consider that this important day is for the groom as well. Both are welcoming changes towards a better life, the so called next chapter. And just like the bride herself, the groom has to deal with certain responsibilities. One of which is choosing designer groomsmen gifts.
The truth is the groom has to partake in certain details regarding the wedding. And one of his known chores would be to make a list of probable gifts for his groomsmen. In this task, he can seek the help and assistance of the best man, thus enabling him to prepare and make scheduled purchases as planned. Together, they can determine and buy whatever presents deemed fit and suitable and later on decide on designer groomsmen gifts. Here are several tips and advice:
First, think of gifts as part of tradition. It has become customary that couples extend their gratitude through gift-giving. Regardless of the busy schedule and other lists of pre-wedding preparations, it is common practice why couples give designer groomsmen gifts. It is for same reasons why couples or the groom need to spend time and make this a part of his own to-do list.
Second, determine your budget. This task can be made easier if you knew how much to spend for each particular item. The groom must be able to identify his financial constraints, consolidate with the bride then proceed with the listing. Naturally, you would not want to give your groomsmen expensive jewelry if such means going beyond your allotted money.
Third, consider the number of your groomsmen. After determining one’s budget, you need to identify the relative number of supposed receivers. Bear in mind that your budget needs to be divided among the actual number of groomsmen and in so doing; you can further stretch the amount and canvass for items that will cover precisely the number of needed gifts.
Fourth, designer groomsmen gifts are bought for a reason and one of those would be to consider its appeal. To the very least, what we merely wanted was to give something that will be appreciated later. Determine which items fit their lifestyle or line of work. What they actually need or in any case, does your groomsmen wanted leisure items. These factors are helpful in realizing what proper gifts to give.
Fifth, decide on the actual gifts. It can be engraved, customized, personally made or embroidered. Things like an engraved Zippo “Black Ice” lighter. Designer groomsmen gifts are considered special once made or hand crafted. Price can set the limit yet the value is undeniably special in itself. The groom has a lot of dealings to fulfill and his best man can lend him a helping hand. However, the groom needs to prioritize, that in choosing for gifts, what matters really is not the money spent but the time and effort shared in identifying what’s ideal. Groomsmen will always appreciate gifts that are well thought of. After they open your gifts and if you follow the advice give here, then they will surely love your groomsmen gifts.
As the 1990s dawned, few industries seemed deader than cigar sales and manufacture.
From its height in the 1850s – when Cuba alone exported 356.6 million cigars – the cigar had fallen into virtual moribundity. Its market had been conquered by cheap, ubiquitous cigarettes. Its image was tarnished in the United States by, among other things, the persistent (and not entirely unfounded) popular association between cigar smoking and the “fat cats” of the Gilded Age – a picture wedged into its place in the popular consciousness by the work of crusading editorial cartoonists.
By the late 1980s, the industry was flatlining, with an aging customer base and few new customers drifting in: the classic example of a product reaching what marketing experts call “old age.” That’s not to say “senility.”
But in 1992 something changed. (Not a bad year for it – with voters decisively rejecting Ronald Reagan’s vice president at the polls and heavy metal yielding to Nirvana, it was a year for change.) The number of imported cigars wafted gently upward during the fourth quarter of the year, yielding a four-percent increase over 1991. The following year, imports rose by ten percent.
The industry was elated. But no one was prepared for what came next – 12 percent growth in 1994, 33 percent growth in 1995, 36 percent first-quarter growth for 1996, shops unable to keep product on the shelves, backorders of 55 million units in 1996, retailers buying shopping-carts full of cigars from distributors and paying retail price just to keep their stores stocked. Women, for the first time, began smoking cigars in large numbers, and prices rose at a fast clip – the $2 premium cigar more or less disappeared over a three-year period. Cigar bars proliferated.
Cigar-friendly restaurants, well, came into existence.
What happened? One observer, Norman Sharp of the Cigar Association of America, told the New York Times in 1996 that the new prevalence of cigar bars goes back to a single Boston restaurant. “It started in the ’80s, when the Ritz-Carlton in Boston hosted a cigar dinner.”
In the same story, Sharp also gave credit to what he called “political correctness,” the all-purpose rhetorical villain of the 1990s. “People are saying they’re tired of being told what to do – or in this case, being told not to use tobacco – and turned to cigar smoking as a way of flipping the bird at well, somebody.
Other observers give some credit to Cigar Aficionado, launched in 1992, a quarterly glossy publication that improved cigars status in society. In Cigar Aficionado, alongside cigar reviews and industry news, you can also read up on new luxury goods, while enjoying interviews with prominent cigar smokers from Jack Nicholson to Whoopi Goldberg. As Runner’s World did for the nascent jogging movement of the 1970s, Cigar Aficionado transformed thousands of isolated cigar lovers into an interest group, simply by addressing them as one.
For another explanation, consider the growth in coffee consumption during the 1990s – the years when Starbucks conquered America. The new prominence of this old, almost stodgy beverage (not unlike the cigar in its public image) could be, and was, traced to the explosion in average working hours during the decade, when a centuries-long trend toward shorter working weeks ground, in the US though not in Europe, to a halt. Bedroom communities grew, while deep social ties grew frayed. American white-collar workers desperately needed something, some small pleasure or indulgence to take the sting out of their epic workweeks. Why not cigars?
Cigar Fox provides the finest cigars that include brands like Cohiba, Montecristo, Gurkha, Macanudo, Rocky Patel, Romeo, Drew Estate, and many more. Other cigar products include cigar humidors, cigar boxes, and cigar accessories like Zippo Lighters. For more information, please visit http://www.cigarfox.com.
About the Author:
CigarFox
provides you the opportunity to build your own sampler of the finest cigars that include cigar brands like Montecristo, Romeo & Julieta, H Upmann, Macanudo, Cohiba, Gurkha and many more. Choose from more than 1000 different brands! Other cigar products include cigar humidors, cigar boxes, and cigar accessories like Zippo Lighters.
Will I be able to fill my non-Zippo lighter with Zippo brand butane?
My boyfriend has a Zippo lighter, and we plan on getting the Z-Plus insert for it to become a torch. I have a non-Zippo brand butane lighter, and I was wondering if I would be able to refill it with the Zippo brand butane. Do all butane lighters get refilled the same way? My non-Zippo has a little hole at the bottom. And I know for my boyfriend’s Zippo, you need to take the inside out and pour the fuel in.
My boyfriend has a Zippo lighter, and we plan on getting the Z-Plus insert for it to become a torch. I have a non-Zippo brand butane lighter, and I was wondering if I would be able to refill it with the Zippo brand butane. Do all butane lighters get refilled the same way? My non-Zippo has a little hole at the bottom. And I know for my boyfriend’s Zippo right now, you need to take the inside out and pour the fuel in. But since we’re getting the Z-Plus insert, I’m not sure how the fuel is going in. So if anyone has one or knows about it, help out!
There is a difference between butane (gas) and lighter fluid (liquid)
It sounds like you are talking about two different types of lighters. In which case, they cannot be filled with the same fluid/gas.
Not sure what’s happening with me on this one, but it seems like the more I listen to it, the better Recovering The Satellites gets. Recovering The Satellites put simply is one of their best CDs to date.
It’s a rare day indeed that I get a CD from an artist that I can truthfully say does not have a bad track in the bunch. I’m more than happy to announce that’s exactly what I must say about this one. There simply is NOT a bad one in the bunch. No fillers here at all, with each song standing tall on it’s own.
One of the refreshingly nice things about this CD is the way all of the participating artists seem to be really enjoying themselves. Combine that with the overall presentation and you’ve got one of Counting Crows most impressive releases ever.
Listen to this CD and I believe you’ll find there’s not much to dis-like about it. The songs are inspired, the production is simply outstanding, and this is clearly the work of a group of musicians in top form. So much so that if you’re even mildly into Rock music you’ll enjoy this CD.
While the entire CD is really very good some of my favorites are track 2 – Angels Of The Silences, track 9 – Another Horsedreamer’s Blues, and track 14 – Walkaways
My Bonus Pick, and the one that got Sore [...as in "Stuck On REpeat"] is track 1 – Catapult. It’s a great track!
Recovering The Satellites Release Notes:
Counting Crows originally released Recovering The Satellites on October 15, 1996 on the Geffen Records label.
CD Track List Follows:
1. Catapult 2. Angels Of The Silences 3. Daylight Fading 4. I’m Not Sleeping 5. Goodnight Elisabeth 6. Children In Bloom 7. Have You Seen Me Lately? 8. Miller’s Angels 9. Another Horsedreamer’s Blues 10. Recovering The Satellites 11. Monkey 12. Mercury 13. Long December, A 14. Walkaways
Counting Crows: David Bryson (guitar, dobro, tambourine, vocals); Dan Vickrey (guitar, vocals); Adam Duritz (piano, Wurlitzer piano, tambourine, vocals); Charles Gillingham (Hammond B-3 organ, piano, Mellotron, Wurlitzer piano, accordion, harmonica, vocals); Matt Malley (electric & acoustic basses, vocals); Ben Mize (drums, tambourine, light bulbs, Zippo lighter, vocals). Additional personnel: David Immergluck (pedal steel guitar, octave mandolin); Marvin Etzioni (mandolin); Mark Phythian (programming).
I am thinking of getting a zippo lighter for my dad’s birthday.He occansaoinally smokes non additive ciggs.I also would like to get one for my self not that i smoke or anything but they look kick@ss.I will get it out of amazon.com but i read some reviews that say that zippos come unfueled.When I do get a zippo for my dad and I what should I buy along with it like fuel,flint etc.Bear in mind I can only pay 20 dollars max but I found a lighter for 10 a flint for 4 fuel for 5 is that a good deal?Oh and I read that some guys zippo lasted for 10 years or so.Are they worth it?
how old are you? forget the zippos. he needs to quit smoking anything, and you need not to play with fire. get your dad a book.