I don't know what the situation is there, but here, unless you have paperwork for the cylinder, and you take it to the proper/correct depot, it won't be accepted.
Jack
I own all my bottles and I'd be hard pressed to find the receipts from when I bought them over the last 27 years.
Where do you swap?I own all my bottles and I'd be hard pressed to find the receipts from when I bought them over the last 27 years.
Where do you swap?
How do the tell?
I have an air gas lese, it's gone up, a lot. Local shop closed, now I'd have to drive n hour for a swap, and of course only open to 4:30 M-F.
I have a tank that was in a barn for 20+ years (and in my possession for 10 since I bought the barn), a little rusty and obviously needs a recert, but as far as I'm concerned it's mine
How do they ask you “prove” whose tank it is? When I swap my lease bottle at AirGas, they never look at it. I could have five different bottles, and as long as my lease is paid, they could give a damn what bottle I bring back.Never-the-less, suppliers here won't deal with other people's cylinders.
Jack
Any idea what happens when you close a lease?How do they ask you “prove” whose tank it is? When I swap my lease bottle at AirGas, they never look at it. I could have five different bottles, and as long as my lease is paid, they could give a damn what bottle I bring back.
The cylinder has the company's name on itHow do they ask you “prove” whose tank it is? When I swap my lease bottle at AirGas, they never look at it. I could have five different bottles, and as long as my lease is paid, they could give a damn what bottle I bring back.
Any idea what happens when you close a lease?
Very...what? Doesn't relate to the OP but took the opportunity to ask my own question...Very… but that has nothing to do with the question at hand.
Which basically boils down to this. Normal swaps none afaik. But what if I say I'm closing my lease?What proof does your gas supplier require to prove the bottle you bring back is the bottle you left with?
Very...what? Doesn't relate to the OP but took the opportunity to ask my own question...
Which basically boils down to this. Normal swaps none afaik. But what if I say I'm closing my lease?
When you close or stop paying for a lease, they want a bottle back. If you don’t return a bottle, at least here, you get sued in small claims court or they send you to collections, depending on supplier. It used to be criminally chargeable as embezzlement, but the state stopped charging that several years ago.
No kidding...
I'm saying if I show up with my old, obviously out of date cylinder I found in the barn and close my lease, will I get any greif?
Then I'd have my newer tank, that I still need to find a place to fill/exchange. Airgas WAS the only game in town, now even they closed...
It's a regional thing as to how this is handled.Certain sizes are lease only. 300cf I believe is the standard rental bottle. The neck ring will have the company’s name on it and most weld shops won’t touch it if doesn’t have their name on it. “Owner” bottles in my experience usually top out around 200cf.
If they are standard sizes, most places will do a straight swap. If the bottle is expired, they might charge you a recertify fee, $20-30 is what I think I just paid. When I got the bottle back, I was given a printout showing the tank manufacturer, manufacturer date and the pressure it was tested to.
On those bottles, they had started out life as CO2 tanks which have a different valve. I had the testing shop install the correct valve for welding gas. At my LWS, since the bottles were odd size for welding gas, ( CO2 bottles go by pound not cf) they tagged my bottles and I got them back.
Some Home Depots have a locker style bottle swap service. Great way to trade out a tank in need of re-certification.

I'm in Washington too. Absolutely no issues in the 50+ years of changing out bottles.I live in Washington State. I have owned tanks since the '80s. I am generally gobsmacked by what people have to put up with in other parts of the country. I am well known at the welding supply store where I swap my cylinders, and I have not been charged a hydrotest fee in at least 20 years if ever. The guys tell you those costs are built into the system. I'm not certain they wouldn't charge someone they don't know, but once you et to know them those fees are history. You can always open a cash account there.
I have never heard of lease only sizes. I own several 330 cf cylinders and have even seen them with a neck ring that says CUSTOMER OWNED. Right now I have one full of argon and one full of helium. BTW those are about the same height and diameter as a 100 lb CO2 cylinder. I use a gas mixer and those are the 3 gasses I mix in varying quantities. I made a little triangular rolling cart to carry those 3 large cylinders.
It's hard for me to imagine that if I put my owner tanks in the back of a truck and drove to Vermont or whereever that my tanks would somehow become illegal. I think it's probably just predatory policies by the companies selling welding gas.
metalmagpie
How do they ask you “prove” whose tank it is? When I swap my lease bottle at AirGas, they never look at it. I could have five different bottles, and as long as my lease is paid, they could give a damn what bottle I bring back.
Jack Ryan's profile says he is in Australia...so yeah, I have no doubt they do things differently down there.
Here you go, start reading herePcustoms what is the story then ?
