I'm not sure exactly what you want to know. This is the latest version of juwel-6. In the picture The tripod is not genuine juwel-6. The black paint will have to be removed.
If you subscribe to this great site - you will have access to manuals and other references? Have you tried using the search function (the magnifying glass top right?) and have you read all the other comments to the other posted Juwel 6 stoves under the Juwel 6 folder - where you so correctly have posted this?
l apologize if l have made some mistake in posting l have not vet understood all the potential of the forum - thanks for your answers
@stug v Welcome. There is no need to apologise. Your stove runs on kerosene. There are a few examples in the Reference Gallery. Yours looks most similar to this: juwel 6 Do you want to get it operating? Tony
+1 on @Tony Press comment. Sometimes the answers are right in front of you - even on questions you did not know you had ;-) In order to help you the best way many of us can - its useful for us to know, if you have already searched in here and did/did not find an answer, or if you have a specific question on for example a given jet size or if another pump or valve can be fitted in your Juwel? All the best.
io had read in a post that the stowe is made with thin material disposable cheap l am afraid it may not withstand the pressure given its 100 years
Hi @stug v , some members here frequently use stoves of 100,120years old and sometimes even older. My oldest Primus N°5 was made (I guess) between 1908 and 1910 and is still going strong! What you have to look out for, are stress cracks in the fount. These also appear in stoves made post WW2 btw. If you can't find any stress cracks, chances are very small your stove will develop them in your life, unless you'd use it intensively each and every day, and often polish it with a product containing ammonia. PS., I have a much younger stove made by G. Barthel, so it does happen sometimes!
Re-reading my PS I see I forgot to say that younger stove suffered from severe Stressus Crackulosis, no medical cure found so far...
Hello @stug v . Try to remove the paint with a liquid paint stripper product rather than use an abrasive like sandpaper. John
I’m sure the stove will work fine. Like Cho stated the three pot supports are not original to this stove. Paint is also not original. Your lucky to have the second version of the flame spreader. Those are almost always lost after 100 plus years.