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Topic: Butane v Propane Help please
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12/10/2009 at 10:57pm
Location: Teesside Outfit: Mitsubishi ASX4
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Quote: Originally posted by dave8858 on 12/10/2009
Its a good time to change to the lightweight calor propane. It weighs half as much burns much hotter and doesn't freeze. Keeps the noseweight down 2 as you can carry 2 cylinders for the same weight as one of the old blue ones.
D
Its not the freezing point you need to worry about. Its the boiling point, ie the temperature the liquid in the cylinder turns to gas. Propane is -42 degrees C, Butane is -0.5 degrees C. The gas in the cylnder is normally under pressure to form a liquid. However, as the pressure is reduced by the liquid changing to gas, a cooling effect happens. This is how a refrigerator works. This cooling effect reduces the temperature of the remaining liquid in the cylinder and as it gets closer to -0.5 degrees, it has the effect of reducing the pressure in the cylinder. Once -0.5 degrees is reached, the Butane will be a liquid, and hence you will be able to hear it sloshing round in the cylinder, but there will be no gaseous Butane to cook the bacon and eggs.
Normally it is warm enough for the outside air to "compensate" for this cooling effect, but as the temperature drops, there is less heat transfer into the cylinder.
Incidentally, the weight of gas in both types of cylinder is much the same, it is the new lightweight Propane cylinders which weigh less.
The "extra energy" in Butane is not all that much more, only about 12%.
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13/10/2009 at 3:54pm
Location: Leeds Outfit: None Entered
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The connections are brass - it's a soft metal (definitely a LOT softer than your steel spanners!), so be careful not to overtighten and damage the connectors (my dad is a mechanic and has a saying for such occasions - 'tight's tight and too tight's b*ggered!!).
Changing the pigtail is easy (and safe) - turn off the gas at the bottle (obviously!!) and the stop-tap in the gas-bottle box, as you would when changing the bottle. Disconnect the pigtail from the butane and unscrew the pigtail from the regulator (remember - left-handed thread). Screw on the propane pigtail so it's finger tight, then carefully nip it up with a spanner - just until it's nicely tight, not that 'stand-on-the-strong-bar' tight you might use for the wheel nuts on your car!!. Connect up the propane bottle, and put a little washing-up liquid in water around the joints. Turn the gas on at the cylinder and check for bubbles. Assuming you have none, turn the stop-tap on and check again. No bubbles? - job's done. Bubbles? - tighten it a little more (but only until there's no bubbles). Rinse the soapy water off when you've done as it's not good for the rubber.
Once you've swapped the pig-tail, there is no reason why you need to change back again - we always use propane, whatever the weather - saves having to change pig-tails, having two lots of gas bottles, and removes the risk of it not gassing on those unexpected nippy mornings!
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