I don't feel it is a deadly unsafe thing to do.
Wick type lanterns are our secondary/outside/nightlight light source.............
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But if it were my cabin, I'd use kerosene lanterns.
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I bought an adapter to refill the canisters . put the canister in the freezer for several hrs , and the 20 lb tank warm. invert the 20 lb tank when all hooked up and open the valve & walk away for 30 minutes.
Starting with a cold cylinder helps you get more liquid transfer. .
Basically correct. The key is the "empty" bottle needs to be "cold" and the "full" bottle needs to be warm, and they need to stay that way during the whole transfer ! If you allow the bottle to stabilize at the same temperature, you will have 2 partially filled bottles.
Simple solution is an adapter on a hose. Put the full bottle in the sunshine or a hot water bath. Put the empty bottle in the shade and/or in an ice water bath.
I don't think turning the 20 lb tank over does anything anymore with the OPD valve.
Actually, the propane is transferred in a gaseous state. Once inside the cold bottle it will turn back to mostly liquid.
I bought an adapter to refill the canisters . put the canister in the freezer for several hrs , and the 20 lb tank warm. invert the 20 lb tank when all hooked up and open the valve & walk away for 30 minutes. it does work, but I think you only get 50 to 75 % fill. never had a valve leak after but no doubt it is somethiong to check after re filling
Actually, the propane is transferred in a gaseous state. Once inside the cold bottle it will turn back to mostly liquid.
You need to invert the 20 lb tank to get liquid into the 1 lb bottle. All my 20 lb tanks have OPD valves and it still works.
I do freeze my 1lb bottles but the real secret is to get the 20 lb bottle as warm as possible. That then uses propane vapor pressure to push the max amount of liquid propane into the 1 lb bottle.
NO. If you transfer gas, you'll get maybe 1% of the fill done before the pressure equalizes and you'll still have an empty disposable cylinder.
You need to take some chemistry/physics classes !
I got this chart from here
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90°F is easy to achieve on a warm sunny day. A 5 gallon bucket of ice water will keep your "empty" 1 lb bottle below 60°F giving you at least a 50 psi pressure differential. As soon as the gas hits the cold bottle it will condense. Yes, transferring liquid is faster.
This a pretty good video on the topic and it gets rid of the need to chill the bottle !
NO Pre-Chilling! FULLY Refill a 1lb Propane Bottle
You can not fill a propane bottle 100% full of liquid propane. There will always be SOME gas !If you want to get your 1lb bottle nearly full of LIQUID propane, you HAVE to invert the big bottle.
First, you are using the same principle of pressure differential that I am referencing.You will NOT get much propane in your 1lb bottle if you do NOT invert the bottle and your method of putting the big bottle in the sun and the small bottle in an ice bath is pretty silly
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I just warm up the bigger propane tank with a Mr. Heater radiant heater till the bottle is as warm as I feel comfortable.
Which is why there is a pressure relief valve even on the small bottles.But, if a small bottle was to be overfilled and then left in the sun....would likely have some problems.
You need to take some chemistry/physics classes !
You can not fill a propane bottle 100% full of liquid propane. There will always be SOME gas !
You can not fill a propane bottle 100% full of liquid propane. There will always be SOME gas !
I did say transferring liquid is faster.
First, you are using the same principle of pressure differential that I am referencing.
Second, many people might think putting a pressurized container of flammable gas in front of a heat source is kind of silly also. A bucket of ice water lasts a long time and requires no monitoring. Sure you need to buy a refill kit with a hose for a few bucks more.
Which is why there is a pressure relief valve even on the small bottles.
Ironic that topic of how to dispose all those 1 lb propane canisters hasn't been covered on GJ that I can recall. I've got a few and now have skinny ones from copper plumbing sweating. Any businesses take those back to re-cycle or melt down the steel??
What happens if these empty LPG bottles get thrown in steel recycle bins??