Portland Billy
Active member
Does anyone know where I can get a 907 campingaz refill?
All the usual suppliers seem unable to get deliveties.
All the usual suppliers seem unable to get deliveties.
The only place that can afford to buy themWe've got loads in Lymington!
You're not wrong there!The only place that can afford to buy them
A 15kg Calor will cost much the same as a 907 refill, the 15kg Calor will give many 907 refills & enough spare to run your bbg.You're not wrong there!
that is often the caseonly a 907 fits in our Sealine S23 gas locker
The idea is you get the 15 blue bottle and a kit which allows you to refill the little one from the bigger one. The bigger bottle never needs to go anywhere near the boat.only a 907 fits in our Sealine S23 gas locker
Has anyone mentioned refiling your own campingaz is hazardous and probably illegal ?
I have a friend who does this with his soda stream gas !! Monster canister from
BOC and an adaptor. Gas until 2046.
I don't believe that is illegal and regard to hazardous; no worse than swapping a gas bottle over imho. I wouldn't do it indoors or even in a garage though. I used to consider the most dangerous thing I did was driving on the M25, but I now think that it is climbing ladders to sort out an aerial at home.Has anyone mentioned refiling your own campingaz is hazardous and probably illegal ?
I assume this to be carbon dioxide so doesn't burn to well ?
Try that with CG, eye wateringWell yes ! I was just mentioning the fact that drawing of gas from one canister to another seems to be more common that first thought.
I had a 15kg that I purchased over 10 years ago only replacing it recently. I had to question the price twice !!
The danger is not just from the risk of leaks but from overfilling a cylinder. There must be headspace in the cylinder to allow for expansion to avoid the risk of its bursting if the cylinder gets warm .I don't believe that is illegal and regard to hazardous; no worse than swapping a gas bottle over imho. I wouldn't do it indoors or even in a garage though. I used to consider the most dangerous thing I did was driving on the M25, but I now think that it is climbing ladders to sort out an aerial at home.