หัวข้อของบทความนี้จะเกี่ยวกับlb green หากคุณต้องการเรียนรู้เกี่ยวกับlb greenมาถอดรหัสหัวข้อlb greenในโพสต์1 lb. propane bottles and fireside chatนี้.

ข้อมูลที่เกี่ยวข้องเกี่ยวกับlb greenใน1 lb. propane bottles and fireside chatมีรายละเอียดมากที่สุด

ชมวิดีโอด้านล่างเลย

ที่เว็บไซต์Birth You In Loveคุณสามารถอัปเดตเอกสารอื่น ๆ นอกเหนือจากlb greenเพื่อรับความรู้เพิ่มคุณค่าให้กับคุณ ที่เว็บไซต์birthyouinlove.com เราอัปเดตเนื้อหาใหม่และถูกต้องสำหรับผู้ใช้เสมอ, ด้วยความปรารถนาที่จะให้ข่าวที่ดีที่สุดสำหรับคุณ ช่วยให้ผู้ใช้เข้าใจข่าวออนไลน์ได้ครบถ้วนที่สุด.

หัวข้อที่เกี่ยวข้องกับหัวข้อlb green

ตัดสินใจว่าฉันจะไม่เติมขวดขนาด 1 ปอนด์เหล่านี้หลังจากประสบปัญหาการรั่วไหลและค้นคว้าเกี่ยวกับขวดด้วยตัวเอง .

ภาพถ่ายที่เกี่ยวข้องบางส่วนที่มีข้อมูลเกี่ยวกับlb green

1 lb. propane bottles and fireside chat
1 lb. propane bottles and fireside chat

นอกจากการหาข่าวเกี่ยวกับบทความนี้แล้ว 1 lb. propane bottles and fireside chat คุณสามารถค้นพบเนื้อหาเพิ่มเติมด้านล่าง

คลิกที่นี่เพื่อดูข้อมูลใหม่เพิ่มเติม

เนื้อหาบางส่วนที่เกี่ยวข้องกับlb green

#propane #bottles #fireside #chat.

1 lb. propane bottle,1 pound propane,1 lb. propane,how to refill a 1 lb. propane,how not to fill a propane tank,shed,woodstove,wood stove,fireside,wood burning stove,wood fire.

1 lb. propane bottles and fireside chat.

lb green.

หวังว่าการแบ่งปันที่เราให้ไว้จะเป็นประโยชน์สำหรับคุณ ขอบคุณมากสำหรับการดูข้อมูลlb greenของเรา

0/5 (0 Reviews)

28 thoughts on “1 lb. propane bottles and fireside chat | เนื้อหาlb greenที่แม่นยำที่สุด

  1. Thiago Rossi says:

    Hi. Thank you for this.

    I just bought my first propane canister to sear meat (sous vide). I have to say I’m worried because I live in an apartment. I was thinking about storing it at my balcony (in a box, on the floor, at the corner), but then I read it shouldn’t be in direct sunlight, so I don’t know if just a cardboard box will do because of the sun.

    I wonder what people with gas grills in their balconies do?!

    Do you have any advice? Also how do I dispose of it when it’s gone? And do I really need to put and remove the torch with every use? The removal is the time I feel more afraid.

    Thanks.

    Ah. I live in Germany and here some buildings have storage rooms in the garage, without wall just wire frame (I don’t know the name in English). Could it be an alternative? It can get cold in the winter.

  2. Jordan says:

    Hey! So I have a 14.1 sized tank but I don’t have the cap for it. Both valves are just open like you showed here in this video. Is it still safe to store without any cap? Please let me know if you can, thanks!

  3. condor5635 says:

    Good video but let me share my experience. Buy the single solid adaptor. The ones with the plastic black knob piece that you show are cheap. Second, never screw with the over press (OP) valve. It’s not required and introduces all sorts of dangerous issues as you note. Chill the 1 pounder bottle in the freezer and use a solid one piece quality adapter and you will fill it to 80% without over filling on one attempt. ALWAYS weigh the final product to make sure you have 16 oz. if by chance you overfill a little use the adapter to release until you’re at the right level but that’s rarely the case. Both of your issues solved. Your flame king solution can have leaks in the Allen key area as well so nothing is guaranteed. I’m totally happy doing it without messing with the OP valve and weighing. Stay safe. Thanks for posting

  4. J C says:

    Can be done. Throw the old bottle in the freezer and make sure you tare the weight. Either way I'm more comfortable with my flame king set lol. Fills easier and I'm not worried about dying anymore. Refilling those little bastards is sketchy at best. It's better to buy the refill kit

  5. Kwang Yi says:

    schrader valve was never designed to be pulled from exit side with a plier and eventually will cease to seated properly causing leaks. In my experience, one Coleman bottle can be refilled for 10-20 times before schrader valve cease to function properly, time to look for garbage bin if if you can find empty Coleman tanks with virgin schrader valve. Filling Coleman tank is not for everyone requires uttermost alertness, also, I doubt pressure relief valve implemented in FlameKing bottle offers bullet-proof safety. Refilling propane tanks, regardless of type of tank used, requires matured mentality.

  6. george curtis says:

    Far as i know, when these bottles empty, no air is entering. So no need to bleed the bottle. Just fill the bottle up and thats it. Is full full, probably not but at least you will have more than half full. Thats enough. Your issue is two field. Your adapter is defective and secondly you were pulling on the vent. Dont pull on the release valve, simple.

  7. MrWinger1951 says:

    Good information, but unfortunately there are a lot of bozos on YT who vouch for the safety (wrongly so) of their fill endeavors using the disposable green bottles. For that reason I purchased the Flame King kit that includes one of their bottles designed for repeated filling, and so far I now have 3 of those bottles and no issues with them using the kit to fill them.

  8. Bill Borden says:

    Both of my Flame King bottles started leaking at the valves after 3 uses. Propane sprays everywhere when connecting to my stoves. The O ring on one of the tanks partially came out of place and shredded into tiny pieces plugging up one my stoves. I would not buy another FK tank. With any tank I would never refill it indoors or start pulling on the Schrader valve. It's also extremely important to spray the tank threads with soapy water to make sure it's not leaking before you start using it

  9. Trumpington Fanhurst says:

    Totally agree if you're not comfortable with refilling the single use tanks, don't do it. Refillable tanks are the way to go or just buy the single use ones. Having said that I refill the colemans, freeze them 1st and never touch the schraeder valve. It gives me a 10-15 oz. fill which is fine for me. I have a solid brass adapter, and soap check the canisters after filling. I both refill and keep them outside until use. I've researched and watched a 100 vids and am trying to be as informed and safe as I can. If I blow myself up at least I'll have saved money doing it. 🙂

  10. GoTigers330 says:

    use an Allen key or similar tool to push down into the fill hole to vent, don't have to touch the pressure valve. The reason people say this is dangerous is because they overfill them cold and stick 10 of them in the garage and when they all come back and warm up they will all leak some propane out and now you have an explosive garage. I feel them at room temperature and I usually vent them through the fill hole at the end and I usually only put about 14 oz of propane in there. I also only fill them about three times each

  11. Burbbilly says:

    Great video! I have been looking into this myself and came up with the same conclusion. I'm planning on purchasing those green tanks that are designed for refill. Propane is nothing to mess with. Thanks for posting this

  12. OldChevy4x4 says:

    The risk definitely outweighs the reward when it comes to refilling those disposable tanks. I've cut many of those apart, they are Thin for sure. As cheap as they are I'll either toss them or make something out of them when empty… no refilling for me!
    Stay safe bud!

ใส่ความเห็น

อีเมลของคุณจะไม่แสดงให้คนอื่นเห็น