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How many folks are going to know to do that? How do you
know that you got contaminated propane? I can just see the looks on the face of the guy at the hardware store when I ask if I can dismantle his filling system to insert my filter ![]() Maybe this is why my surveyor requested that I remove all copper tubing in my propane system. Doug s/v Callista "none" wrote in message news ![]() Or, one could make a filter filled with citric acid to trap the amonia. rick On Wed, 12 May 2004 22:08:40 -0700, jmax wrote: I have spent many years teaching fire department and emergency responders in hazardous material responses. One very scary fact that I learned in the Haz-Mat response area is that the railroads utilize the same rail tank car to hall both Propane and Ammonia. As a result it is possible to get a propane cylinder filled with ammonia contaminated gas. The impact of this contamination is that ammonia very rapidly dissolves copper. The copper Propane lines can leak explosive gas with even one contaminated propane cylinder fill. Removal of all copper tube and fittings is recommended to prevent this possibility of a explosive propane gas leak. -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
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