- A CLEAN BURN: Our tiki torch fuel is processed and refined to create a powerful light source that is smoke and odor free and without harmful soot or other pollutants often found in kerosene.
- MULTIPURPOSE USE: Use inside the house on a dining room table, in centerpieces, or for lamps, lanterns, and torch style candlesticks. Perfect for use to kindle Shabbat candles and more.
- OUTDOOR DECORATIONS: For elegant parties and events, use this fuel to light up tiki torches and other lanterns to light up pathways, stairs and aisles, or to beautify wedding celebrations.
- EMERGENCY LIGHT: Not only for gardens, patios or yards, use this instead of candles or flashlights during blackouts or power outages. The spout is designed to easily fill cans and canisters.
- INTENDED USE: It is safe to use with new or old wicks as long as they are made for use in Oil lamps, lantern (fibreglass or cotton lamp oil wicks). Do not use with floating wicks or non-lamp oil/lantern cotton wicks.
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Natasha Lee Aiken
I love this product for its reliable purity and its price point
I love this product for its reliable purity and its price point. Ner Mitzvah paraffin lamp oil is a clean burning fuel that, if properly used, provides odor and smoke-free lights appropriate for many occasions. My lamps are frequently used indoors for their ambiance and occasionally for emergencies, and of all the brands I've sampled, this is my favorite. A few product reviews note that this oil produces smoke and/or an unpleasant odor. Since I never experience either of these while using Ner Mitzvah's paraffin, I'm guessing that the complaints evolve from factors other than impurities. If you're using a lamp that previously held another type of lamp oil, the odor of other product will likely prevail over the barely detectable odor of this product. A thorough washing and a new wick should solve the problem nicely. Another odor-increasing factor is incomplete combustion from a maladjusted flame. Signs of this include any of the following: high flame, yellow flame and smoke production. If any of these occur, you can solve the problem by retracting the wick enough to support complete combustion. Finally, winging it with this kind of lighting is not the best plan. You might consider reading any of the several webpages devoted to safe operation of oil lamps in the home.
Sheelagh Kathryn Lovaas
Great product for an even better value.
Well boxed, and just a great product. This is the second one we’ve purchased - the first one lasted nearly three years (amazing when considering how many Shabbat candles were lit with it, and how long those candles burned for). You’d be hard pressed to find a better price for a superior product such as this.
Tim Slade
Excellent quality lamp oil
I had been using Lamplight Ultra Pure for many years and just found this brand. It's just as good and less expensive so it will be my go-to brand at least for the foreseeable future. Well packaged for shipping. One thing to keep in mind - this is a large one-gallon container. When first using it pour very slowly and use a wide-mouthed funnel to avoid a big mess.
Haley Engelskind
Great for Indoors!
I recently bought a competitors brand Paraffin oil and it was advertised as clear, smokeless and no smell. Well, it was clear and smokeless but there was a smell while burning. It was especially prevalent with my larger lanterns. I couldn't use them indoors due to the smell. This brand, however, is as advertised. I was so happy with this oil! I can now use my Deitz #90 lantern indoors thanks to Ner Mitzvah. There is hardly any smell at all and I was so happy to be able to use my lantern as a heater in my bedroom. You also get a really nice yellow and mellow flame which is desirable to me. If you want really bright white light for outdoor use, use kerosene. If you want to use your lantern or lamp to get a nice relaxing glow with very little smell, buy this brand of oil. I will definitely be a regular customer.
Livia Holguin Crooks
Great Product and Service
We have a set of five Copper outdoor torches that we use during the Summer. They hold about 12 oz each so I need gallon containers when I refill them every three to five days. You cannot use tiki brand fuel in these as it smokes too bad and will adversely affect the lamps. The manufacturer recommends a smokeless paraffin oil which we used to get at our local Menards. Unfortunately, they no longer stock this item and I had look for another source. I found this product on Amazon and it meets all our expectations. No smoke and very little carbon buildup on our torches. The supplier ships promptly and makes sure that there are no leaks during shipping. Great product and Service.
Zack Ael
Works as advised.
The lamp oil arrived today and I promptly tested it due to the negative reviews. In the past I have used kerosene and Sterno brand liquid paraffin. I tested this oil in a 100 year old farm oil lamp. I chose this lamp because it burns the dirtiest of our collection. I have a fairly good nose and this oil puts off very little odor. I read previous reviews noting smoke and a strong odor. IMO this is normally due to an improper wick length. Too long will cause incomplete combustion as will too short depending on the lamp. With a lamp in good working condition and a properly adjusted wick you should have no trouble. This seems to be a good quality product.
Carol Lynn Edelmann
Liquid paraffin
This is a great product that burns bright and clean. There is no offensive odor, and it is a quality product. I could only buy liquid paraffin in 32 oz. containers, and it was three times the price per ounce I paid for the gallon product.
Santos Ferrer Ytzehr
I love Amazon!
Today I received this Lamp oil that I ordered in the gallon. I don't use this for lamps. I live in Florida and I have an outdoor patio which I have a charbroil fireplace on. To get my fires started I usually have to squirt a bunch of lighter fluid or charcoal lighter on the Kinling to get it going until it catches the larger pieces of wood on fire. That stuff is really expensive. Just a quart can cost up to seven or eight bucks. So I want on Amazon trying to find something that I can use to pour on the Kinling in a fairly generous amount and not cost me a fortune. I wasn't sure how well it would work but to my surprise it worked amazingly well. I Pour about two or 3 ounces on some twigs or small woodchips and it keeps them burning for 10 or 15 minutes which is well long enough for the larger pieces to catch and before you know it you have a rip roaring fire going. Great deal for the price and the purpose.
Tina Hernandez
Pure paraffin oil without the smell
I started making small ceramic oil lamps (small round wicks in a small ceramic ball)... Burns smokeless and cannot smell it at all. The Ultrapure gives off a distinct fuel odor in my candles but never in a Dietz type lantern. Both are excellent products... but this clear paraffin burns bright and has become my #1 choice for my lamps and mason jar oil lamp set ups
Loni Johnson
Smokeless, scentless, and well-packaged
I’ve decades’ experience filling my vintage and antique oil lamps with the so-called smokeless oil from Wally World or the local hardware shop. Whatever the brand I’ve found there, my lamps have always had a vaguely chemical odor, somewhere between paraffin and hot 10W-30. This product, however, does not stink. I get a bright, clear flame with little flicker (assuming that I avoid draughts). This is especially important for hurricane, disaster, or even camping prep. Oil lamps in these situations have often been my only reliable source of functional light. Candles are great for ambiance, but they aren’t terribly functional when it comes to reading, chores, or finding that extra pack of batteries that I know are here somewhere! *Requisite caveat: do not leave oil lamp or candle unattended and/or in area(s) prone to wind/hail/flying cows/counter cats/dog tails.* So far, my well-trimmed (but equally well-used) wick hasn’t coated the inside of my new chimney with any noticeable soot, either. Better than all these things, however, was the packaging. If you’re into that sort of thing, you’ll be glad to know that the manufacturer takes leak prevention seriously. The entire jug was wrapped in a sealed plastic bag. Inside that, the lid was secured by two sets of adhesive tape: one crosswise over the top to prevent the lid spinning; the other wrapped horizontally around the lid, securing it to the jug. The lid, proper, is a press-and-twist “childproof” safety cap. Beneath all of those precautions, the jug spout was sealed with foil/plastic. Suffice it to say: despite the best efforts of some Amazonian warehouseperson tossing the oil into an oversized box with other random (pointy) purchases and little padding, the jug made it to me safely, sans drips or explosions, in the middle of summer in the South. Most impressive. The only downside I’ve noted to date is that one still requires a funnel (or an exceptionally steady hand) when filling one’s lamps. On a potentially related note: assuming prompt cleanup, it doesn’t stain white, quartz countertops. Or so I’ve been told.