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#1
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Hi,
I know that those little green propane canisters can never be trusted not to leak and should never be kept below decks, but what if they were individually vacuum sealed and then placed in a ziploc freezer bag. Is there an obvious mistake in this logic? We do have a propane detector on board. Thoughts?, Mike. |
#2
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beaufortnc wrote:
Hi, I know that those little green propane canisters can never be trusted not to leak and should never be kept below decks, but what if they were individually vacuum sealed and then placed in a ziploc freezer bag. Is there an obvious mistake in this logic? Yes. If the canister leaks, it will blow your ZipLock bag open. Lew |
#3
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On Fri, 06 Jan 2006 00:35:23 GMT, Lew Hodgett
wrote: Yes. If the canister leaks, it will blow your ZipLock bag open. ================================= Very true, just create a small on deck locker somewhere. |
#4
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beaufortnc wrote:
Hi, I know that those little green propane canisters can never be trusted not to leak and should never be kept below decks, but what if they were individually vacuum sealed and then placed in a ziploc freezer bag. Is there an obvious mistake in this logic? We do have a propane detector on board. Thoughts?, Mike. Yes. If the pressurized can leaks then it will more than fill the baggy. I keep mine in a topside locker (isolated from the bilges) with a low vent that will let any leaks flow out overboard. |
#5
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I see some merit to that idea. After storing a bottle in such a way,
you would know immediately whether the bottle leaked or not when you retrieved it. If you found that the storage bag had ruptured, you would know to take appropriate steps to vent the storage locker. If the bag was still sealed, you would know that the cannister didn't leak. I store three of those throw away cannisters in a piece of PVC pipe secured to my Edson steering pedestal. The white pipe matches the color of the steering pedestal, so it blends well and the material is cheap and easy to work with. I have a small hold drilled into the bottom threaded cap, so if a cannister leaks, it has somewhere to go, into the cockpit which is open to the weather. |
#6
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![]() "beaufortnc" wrote in message oups.com... Hi, I know that those little green propane canisters can never be trusted not to leak and should never be kept below decks, but what if they were individually vacuum sealed and then placed in a ziploc freezer bag. Is there an obvious mistake in this logic? We do have a propane detector on board. We have a canvas bag with a zipper that holds three of those cylinders and it hangs on the pushpit right beside our Magma cooker. http://www.boatus-store.com/webapp/w...002/465/430/15 Not cheap, but got mine as a gift. Leanne |
#7
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"beaufortnc" wrote in news:1136506471.958632.165480
@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: Is there an obvious mistake in this logic? Yes! Propane canisters have a BLOWOFF VALVE! Big tanks do too! They're not "leaking"....they're blowing off excess pressure because propane pressure depends a LOT on temperature and the blowoff valve is there to keep the can from exploding, not from fire, but from PSI! Look on a propane torch tank top. See that little hole that looks like its got the guts of a tire valve in it? That's the excess pressure relief valve! The aluminum cans have a popoff valve in them, too, but not resettable like the propane torch tanks. |
#8
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#9
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yes...the pressure! think about it for a sec.
rick "beaufortnc" wrote in message oups.com... Hi, I know that those little green propane canisters can never be trusted not to leak and should never be kept below decks, but what if they were individually vacuum sealed and then placed in a ziploc freezer bag. Is there an obvious mistake in this logic? We do have a propane detector on board. Thoughts?, Mike. |
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35s5 Not vacuum bagged! | ASA |