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>>Unless your house is small, *very* energy-efficient, *and* located in an area
>>with mild winters, I have to think that a six-month supply of propane is going
>>to be at least two thousand gallons.
>
>I'm in NY [as is the OP] and I use propane for dryer, water heating,
>stove, and a space heater. Total usage is under 500gallons a year.
>[guessing 200 of that is heater.]
--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)
No problem. I was just wondering if things had somehow gone haywire.
As I understand matters the tank regulator drops the
pressure to about 10 psi. A liquid propane line
would have to withstand pressures up to 250 psi. While
that's occasionally done the idea scares me for a
residential application.
The local propane dealer(s) would be your best source of information on this,
particularly with respect to whether the steepness of your driveway would
really be a problem for them. Or the distance from the road to your house, for
that matter: the delivery trucks have fairly long hoses. Even if the driveway
is too steep for the truck, and the house too far from the road to put the
tank at the road, you may be able to put the tank somewhere in between, as
long as it's within reach of their hose from a place they can get the truck
to. IMO your best bet is to call a couple local propane dealers and ask them
to come out and look at your situation. They'll be able to tell you if they
can deliver to you or not.
The table only goes to 400'. It sounds like you are going to talk to a
supplier, so they should be able to calculate drop for further distances. [links]
That means a tank that is 80% full on a mild March day, might register as 85-percent (or higher) at the mid-July cook out. It’s the same amount of propane, but it’s taking up more space. So the extra space in the tank is a cushion against the pressure that builds up in a tank when it’s hot. [links]
The 80% fill rule is a preventative safety measure against the fluctuations that happen inside a tank. Propane, like water, will expand when heat is added to it. Propane, however, will increase in volume nearly 17 times greater than water over the same temperature increase. To allow for this expansion, propane containers are filled to only 80% of their capacity. here
How many gallons of propane are in a 120-gallon tank? Some of you may recognize this as a trick question. The tank has a 96-gallon capacity. So why aren’t propane tanks ever filled up all the way? That has to do with the 80% fill rule. more
Want to know the fill capacity of your propane tank? Multiply the tank’s total capacity by 0.8. Here’s a handy cheat sheet showing you total number of gallons remaining based on your tank size and current gauge level. more
Strange, maybe in Canada they just don’t need to print that info. That’s well within the limits for one of my projects, and probably a light air cannon too, but the main use would be setting up four or six of them together for a portable air tank, after draining them out, cleaning, drilling and tapping, etc. [links]
printed right on he label on the blue canister. here
228 is the service pressure, 286 is the test pressure. more
I just looked on my Bernzomatic (14.1 oz) more
That is interesting. They’re made in Ohio, so I would think that they would bear US labels… but what do I know?