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tom October 30th 07 04:27 PM

Propane and propane accessories
 
Possible stupid ?s, I've never used propane before.

So I've got this nice new aluminum propane tank, what I see is you
exchange the
tanks, something I don't want to do, I want my tank back, is this
normal request or am I
going to get a blank stare?
I assume if I have to leave it they will give me a receipt and if I
get the "you don't receipt",
I should just walk out?
Is Suburban or Eastern propane ok?
Does the tank have to be completely empty?

thx, Tom


Ansley W. Sawyer October 30th 07 04:55 PM

Propane and propane accessories
 
Tom,

Not stupid at all.

Keep you tank. Do not use the exchanges. Go to someone who fills them while
you wait. I use either my local hardware store or the local Suburban
Propane. The tank does not need to be empty, they can fill by weight.

Ansley Sawyer
SV Pacem



Red October 30th 07 05:15 PM

Propane and propane accessories
 
Tom,
Most regular propane refilling stations can refill your tank while you
wait. The tank exchange is convenient for them as they can fill many
tanks in one period. They usually offer propane in them slightly cheaper
if you don't take their time up for one refill and just exchange the
tank. It only works for regular commercially available tanks like the
one on your barbeque or camper or forklift, *not usually* the exotic
specialty tanks like fiberglass or aluminum - at least not around here.
Red

Capt. JG October 30th 07 05:17 PM

Propane and propane accessories
 
"tom" wrote in message
ups.com...
Possible stupid ?s, I've never used propane before.

So I've got this nice new aluminum propane tank, what I see is you
exchange the
tanks, something I don't want to do, I want my tank back, is this
normal request or am I
going to get a blank stare?
I assume if I have to leave it they will give me a receipt and if I
get the "you don't receipt",
I should just walk out?
Is Suburban or Eastern propane ok?
Does the tank have to be completely empty?

thx, Tom



If you've got a new tank with the new valves, then you should be able to get
it filled no problem. No reason to do the exchange. I've been burned before
(no pun intended) by giving up a good propane tank for one that didn't work
right. They exchanged it, but I would have rather had the good one rather
than wonder about if the "replacement" was any good.

No stupid at all.. no stupid questions, just stupid answers. :-}

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com




[email protected] October 31st 07 12:27 AM

Propane and propane accessories
 
On Oct 30, 6:27 am, tom wrote:
Possible stupid ?s, I've never used propane before.

So I've got this nice new aluminum propane tank, what I see is you
exchange the
tanks, something I don't want to do, I want my tank back, is this
normal request ...


This is a normal request. You can get propane tanks filled just about
anywhere in the world. You typically go into your local gas company,
hardware store, or service station with your empty tank and ask them
to fill it. In the US you will buy gallons of propane, most
everywhere else you will buy kilos. Partial fills aren't a problem.
Most places will put your tank on a scale and fill it until its weight
matches that stamped on the tank. In the US they will fill it until
the OPD closes...

-- Tom.


David Scheidt October 31st 07 01:51 AM

Propane and propane accessories
 
wrote:

:This is a normal request. You can get propane tanks filled just about
:anywhere in the world. You typically go into your local gas company,
:hardware store, or service station with your empty tank and ask them
:to fill it. In the US you will buy gallons of propane, most
:everywhere else you will buy kilos. Partial fills aren't a problem.
:Most places will put your tank on a scale and fill it until its weight
:matches that stamped on the tank. In the US they will fill it until
:the OPD closes...

Legally, they're generally required to fill by weight. The cylinder has
three sets of numbers of interest. It's got the date of manufacture and
of recertificaton. It's got a tare weight (labled TW, about 18 for a 20
lb steel cylinder.), which is the weight of the empty cylinder. It's got the
water capacity of the cylinder. That's the weight of the water, in pounds,
cylinder holds if filled. The conversion from WC to pounds of propane is a
WC of 2.39 equals one pound of propane, but everyone uses a chart. The
actual filled weight isn't on the cylinder.

You're right that it's common practice to fill until the OPD shuts
off, though.

Rusty[_2_] November 1st 07 04:12 PM

Propane and propane accessories
 
Actually, at least where I lived, the exchange sites charged about twice the
price you would pay if you took your tank across the street to the local gas
station to have it filled. The Shell station refill cost was about 7 dollars
while the exchange at the grocery store was 14 or 15 dollars. I guess they
want you to pay for the privelege of not waiting 3 or 4 minutes for the
refill.

Rusty

"Red" wrote in message
...
Tom,
Most regular propane refilling stations can refill your tank while you
wait. The tank exchange is convenient for them as they can fill many tanks
in one period. They usually offer propane in them slightly cheaper if you
don't take their time up for one refill and just exchange the tank. It
only works for regular commercially available tanks like the one on your
barbeque or camper or forklift, *not usually* the exotic specialty tanks
like fiberglass or aluminum - at least not around here.
Red




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