An interesting experiment. Have you checked how much soot is produced when the wood wick burns? Already candles produce too much soot in my opinion. I really like the smell of beeswax candles. But even with very small steam engines, I also prefer alcohol burners. They also produce a little soot, but not as much.
Writes someone who is sometimes too lazy to polish.
I have not run an engine on this prototype yet, but have found beeswax burns much cleaner than paraffin candles.
Update: I have found my little wood wick tea light experiment is what candlemakers call "over wicked" I found they spend a great deal of time sizing the wick to the candle to produce a pool of wax, they are looking to not over heat there fragrances, and also get the candle to burn at an efficient rate.
My candle produced a LOT of heat, mine is not scented other than natural but it burned beautifully for about 12 to 15 minutes, then the pool of wax actually started to boil! While this is impressive, it is NOT a good thing! It sounds very much like bacon being fryed in a pan that is to hot, and splatters molten wax everywhere making a mess and also would not be fun to get the hot wax on your skin or in eyes.
Most commercial produced wooden wicks are .010 to .040 thick and from .250 to .750 wide, mine is .125 thick and 1.125 wide, so it's really big in the candle world, it may have been properly sized for a candle say...6 to 8 inches in diameter so as not to have a boiling wax condition.
I doubt these are practical for our use, but if anyone wants to play around with them, Its a VERY good idea to do some extended time burn tests in a safe area before you slide one of these under a valued steam engine boiler, proceed with caution!
