[TheForge] Re: old propane tanks
Mike Spencer
mspencer at tallships.ca
Mon Sep 26 14:00:34 EDT 2011
> I'm scared of things that can potentially go "BOOM" so I wouldn't trust
> just washing it out with water.
Same here. After removing the valve and washing, I do as Ron said:
fill with water nearly to the threads and then torch out the
valve. Then I wash it again and let it stand (dry/empty) for a week.
Then fill water and cut with an abrasive wheel or a sabre saw.
> A friend of mine set an old acetylene tank in his band saw, turned
> it on and left the shop. Nothing exploded so we don't know if this
> was a safe procedure or luck...
In my only slightly humble opinion, *nothing* to do with acetylene is
a "safe procedure". Did you know that acetylene bubbled through a
copper sulphate ("bluestone") solution will precipitate out tiny
particles of copper acetylide, a compound that's highly explosive and
very impact sensitive? In the days of water/carbide acetylene
generators, they sometimes made the tank from copper. Copper acetylide
would accumulate in the seams. If the tank developed a leak, it would
go to the tinsmith for repairs. The tinsmith (if he didn't know about
this) would try to hammer up the seams to tighten them and **BLAM!!**
Seam turns into razor-edged moderny metal sculpture with unpredictable
collateral effects on tinsmith.
Similar can happen with some other metals.
FWIW,
- Mike
--
Michael Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada .~.
/V\
mspencer at tallships.ca /( )\
http://home.tallships.ca/mspencer/ ^^-^^
More information about the TheForge
mailing list