Camping Gaz refill whip - Parts

The Camping Gaz cyclinder, the subject of this thread, is a butane cyclinder. Whether it could stand the extra cylinder pressure of being filled with propane I don't know, but probably best to stick with what it was built for.

They are pressure certified the same, stamped on the skirt. Discussed some time ago here, haven't got the number to hand but fine.

The only pressure I can see stamped on a 907 cylinder is " PD 10kg/cm²" .( equal to 9.8 bar)

The pressure of propane could become uncomfortably close to that on a warm summer's day , even in the UK, and exceed it if the bottle was left/placed in the sun


I would also consider what NIET GESCHIKT V PROPAAN might mean

propane-vapor-pressure-diagram.png
 
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You can source gas considerably cheaper than retail Calor prices. I use FLOGAS from here:
http://gasdeal.co.uk/product/butane-gas-cylinders/13kg-butane-gas-cylinder/

I find the 13Kg cylinders most convenient, and no deposit/exchange is needed ON THAT SIZE. Delivery is quick and free. (They also advertise on EBAY under the name 'Alfresco' ). Delivery is actually from the nearest FlOGAS depot ..... in my case Fawley.

You can get the hose and fittings you need at almost any caravan outlet.
For those living near a Trago Mills, the 13kg butane cylinders are available for £19.99.
 
Almost 5 times as much gas: a Camping Gaz 907 holds 2.7kg of butane while a Calor 13kg holds... 13kg.
Just speaking theoretically of course, as refilling a 907 safely for under £4 from a larger cylinder is obviously not a good idea at all, you never get quite all of the gas out of the 13kg cylinder, as the pressure falls off markedly after a few fills.

Boyle's law says that if you pour a little boiling water over the 13kg cylinder occasionally, the pressure in the cylinder increases, permitting the quicker flow of gas into the 907, (or so I'm told)!

Nevertheless, a derivation of Boyle's law (Xip Bo Ting's law) states that the time taken for the 907 to fill up increases in direct proportion to the number of fills previously undertaken from the original 13kg cylinder. I think the formula goes something like:

Final fill time (mins) = [original fill time (mins)] x (1 + no. of previous fills)

...or so I'm told...
 
Sorry to wake this one up again. With the camping Gaz fitting no longer available from BES I searched around for somewhere that I could get all the parts and hopefully save on the postage. I found Hamilton's in Belfast that appeared to have all the parts. When they turned up, both the camping Gaz and the calor adaptor said had the L/H 21.8 male thread and I couldn't connect both together. After a very thorough search it seems it is only BES that sell the Calor adaptor with the W20 thread. The Pig tail hoses do not seem to be available from anywhere with a L/H 21.8 thread on both ends. I did find an adaptor 1/2 BSP to M20 that I think would have converted the Calor adaptor, but was only slightly cheaper than the Calor adaptor from BES. So rather than saving on postage I ended up buying an extra Calor adaptor. I should have followed the advice in this thread and bought the parts from BES and the Camping Gaz adaptor elsewhere.
 
Sorry to wake this one up again. With the camping Gaz fitting no longer available from BES I searched around for somewhere that I could get all the parts and hopefully save on the postage. I found Hamilton's in Belfast that appeared to have all the parts. When they turned up, both the camping Gaz and the calor adaptor said had the L/H 21.8 male thread and I couldn't connect both together. After a very thorough search it seems it is only BES that sell the Calor adaptor with the W20 thread. The Pig tail hoses do not seem to be available from anywhere with a L/H 21.8 thread on both ends. I did find an adaptor 1/2 BSP to M20 that I think would have converted the Calor adaptor, but was only slightly cheaper than the Calor adaptor from BES. So rather than saving on postage I ended up buying an extra Calor adaptor. I should have followed the advice in this thread and bought the parts from BES and the Camping Gaz adaptor elsewhere.

You could use two Calor pigtails with the M20 ends joined together with a nipple.

I think these three parts from Will Hayward will do the trick

The hose is available in several different lengths
 
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I think you are right, but you can buy a lot of Camping Gaz for £60.


c.Two refills!
Here's the bits for < 22 pounds
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/CARAVAN-M...692014?hash=item2109e177ee:g:udMAAOSw2s1UsoRi
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/CAMPING-G...291462?hash=item4af3d34e06:g:alAAAOSwAYtWQ0oN

Continuing the hypotheticals- the pigtail comes with a RH thread.Sacrificing an old regulator provides a LH nut to replace it. (Does need the crimped HP pipe removing to thread it on) ..... Apparently...
 
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I think you are right, but you can buy a lot of Camping Gaz for £60.

£60 for bits and pieces and you also have to buy the gas in larger cylinders

But you miss the point.
Its all about not paying for the Camping Gaz refills (around £30 for a 907 I believe)
 
c.Two refills!
Here's the bits for < 22 pounds
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/CARAVAN-M...692014?hash=item2109e177ee:g:udMAAOSw2s1UsoRi
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/CAMPING-G...291462?hash=item4af3d34e06:g:alAAAOSwAYtWQ0oN

Continuing the hypotheticals- the pigtail comes with a RH thread.Sacrificing an old regulator provides a LH nut to replace it. (Does need the crimped HP pipe removing to thread it on) ..... Apparently...



One link is to a propane hose but I suppose you can cut the POL connector off and fudge something together with bits of an old regulator

The other link is to a CG cyl adapter to butane (21.8mm LH ) thread so yud have to do the same mod with the other end of the hose to get butane nuts both ends


would do the job for £25
 
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Having changed boats in 2014 we get through perhaps three 907’s a year as the chief officer likes to use the oven . And I quite like eating the things she cooks .
£25 for a kit to refill 907’s starts to look well worth the effort .

But there is this – which I have not seen before until I searched just now.................
http://www.gasproducts.co.uk/acatal...l_Gauge.html?gclid=CLyf28CEtssCFQbgGwod8pEA6Q
If it takes 2.75kg of gas that’s less than 6 litres which would be about £2 per refill at a road fuel station.
I expect lpg might be slightly less efficient than Butane but , for me, payback would be under two years. Are there any issues with lpg rather than butane?
 
Having changed boats in 2014 we get through perhaps three 907’s a year as the chief officer likes to use the oven . And I quite like eating the things she cooks .
£25 for a kit to refill 907’s starts to look well worth the effort .

But there is this – which I have not seen before until I searched just now.................
http://www.gasproducts.co.uk/acatal...l_Gauge.html?gclid=CLyf28CEtssCFQbgGwod8pEA6Q
If it takes 2.75kg of gas that’s less than 6 litres which would be about £2 per refill at a road fuel station.
I expect but , for me, payback would be under two years. Are there any issues with lpg rather than butane?


Some/ many roadside fillings stations in the UK may not fill them.. Eventually the message will get through and they will unless local regulations /terms of their licence do not allow it.

The LPG at the roadside is a mixture of propane and butane. Variable I think, but you will need a regulator and appliances that are suitable. Appliances probably will be but you may need a 30mb regulator if you dont already have one.

Not sure what you mean by, "lpg might be slightly less efficient than Butane" You will get almost the same amount of heat from butane, propane and lpg on a weight for weight basis.
 
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