LPG Cylinder Tank expiry
I reckon I must call on 'classicswede' for this one. This question was brushed over in another thread.
I can tell you about CNG cylinder expiry, but where do we stand on LPG tanks? I pulled two stonking great 60L LPG tanks off recently. I know for a fact they were 18 odd years old - at least. Had they been Type 3 CNG cylinders, despite being £2000-2500 each new, they'd be scrap. These LPG tanks looked solid enough, but I threw them anyway. I've searched this, I failed to get a proper answer. What is the general rule? |
The offical status is after 10 years old the tanks should be retested.
In the UK there is no requirement for retesting and the UK body will register conversions with tanks way over ten years old. Provided the tank looks clean there is no reason to replace With that said tanks fitted outside exposed to grit and teh weather can rust through and be leaking within 3/4 years. I have had to replace a few tanks that have rusted through and started leaking. The factory paint on tanks is not enough for outside tanks. I always add extra rust protection |
I'm thinking without the magic ingredients, an LPG tank isn't all that dangerous anyway? Run with me a mo'
The main issue with CNG is that it can be wet. Hence after 10-15 years, you've a pint of water swilling in an outwardly mint looking cylinder. Also CNG tanks tend to get mounted in the salt-spray, and come caked in mud. All this conducive to decay, and I understand steel and most polymers lose their ductility with age. And we're at 3000psi. Oops. Before anybody leaps to conclusions, I'm not recommending this: Surely Shirley, any salt-sprayed LPG tank is going to 'let-go' gradually, so it's not quite the hazard the alarmists would have us believe. OK, don't smoke, and don't have it parked in an enclosed space at the time, but an externally mounted LPG tank, sitting in a driveway isn't all that dangerous. Without ignition, it's not 3000psi, it's 150psi ish. A can of furniture polish/brake-cleaner/lighter fluid/ WD40/whipped-cream has about that in it. You've got those in your garage/kitchen now. The only real issue is that LPG/butane/propane etc is heavier that air so without a breeze, sits about. Methane floats up. - WITH THE ABOVE CAVEATS - You won't smoke, sit in an enclosed space.... As long as we're thinking, it's not something to get in a 'tizz' about. Even if we wanted it to be dangerous, it can't be. I'm guessing you've seen your fair share of tired LPG tanks. By the time you get ot see them, they've near vented anyway. Am i wrong? And does LPG come wet? |
Quote:
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Morning all , this firm based outside Haydock on the A580 appear to perform hydraulic testing of cylinders & recertification
https://www.gas-uk.co.uk |
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