I went out to the garage today to do a little welding on one of the first not-too-cold days in some time. By that, I mean almost up to freezing. It's been down to zero at night fairly regularly.
So I opened the oxygen tank, hisssss. Opened the acetylene tank, silence. Gauges zero. Could it be that it's too cold? I know the acetylene is dissolved in acetone, not just compressed in the tank. Is there some temperature at which it just won't bubble out of solution?
And what's the best way to warm up the tank? I'm guessing standing it in a drain pan of burning gasoline wouldn't be at the top of the list.
Hopefully someone can speak from experience; I can theorize just fine.
(Yes, I had considered the tank might be empty, but in 30 years I have never run out of acetylene before oxygen; very little use on this pair of tanks anyway.)
So I opened the oxygen tank, hisssss. Opened the acetylene tank, silence. Gauges zero. Could it be that it's too cold? I know the acetylene is dissolved in acetone, not just compressed in the tank. Is there some temperature at which it just won't bubble out of solution?
And what's the best way to warm up the tank? I'm guessing standing it in a drain pan of burning gasoline wouldn't be at the top of the list.

Hopefully someone can speak from experience; I can theorize just fine.
(Yes, I had considered the tank might be empty, but in 30 years I have never run out of acetylene before oxygen; very little use on this pair of tanks anyway.)
Never knew it had one. I found it all carboned up - on mine (Purox) it's sintered bronze like some gasoline filters in the center of an Allen screw. I got the carbon out, free enough I could blow through it, and nothing. 