sailaboutvic
Well-Known Member
Here another question , how many people turn the gas off at the bottle every time they not in use ?
It cost more money to fill the bottle completely
When we had a calor gas concession in our family business, we were told that under no circumstances should a cylinder be used other than in a vertical position. I have seen cylinders stored on their sides in boats.
This is undoubtedly true, but is also true of wine bottles. So for me the real question is not "why are gas bottles not filled brim-full?", but "why are gas bottles only filled to 80% [rather than 83, or 91 or...]?".
It can't be that liquid expansion would burst the bottle if filled to more than 80%, that would only require a tiny free space as in a wine bottle, and besides the coefficient of expansion of the liquid gas and that of the metal bottle will largely cancel out.
It can't be due to vapour pressure should the temperature rise as the vapour pressure is the same whether filled to 90% or 0.9%, ie as long as there's any liquid at all.
It might be to reduce splashes of liquid entering the regulator or hose to regulator - the gas can be used in moving appliances such as boats - or maybe to give some tolerance to heel.
It might be to allow a margin of error when filling. The point being that the gas bottle is opaque, so the only way to know how much gas is in there is by weight. But the gas bottle is heavy compared to the re-fill, so one is subtracting large numbers to arrive at the 'fullness' of the cylinder, and this is renowned as a recipe for poor accuracy, especially as the scales are not the same and will have calibration errors in addition to random ones. Suppose it gives a standard deviation of 4% of fill, then to ensure that the bottle is filled to 100% in fewer than 1 in 1 million (say) cases one has to be approximately 5 sigma away. Thus the max safe nominal fill is 100% - 5 x 4% = 80%.
My bet is that it's the last reason, with a few extra margins added on for good measure.
I've found wide variations in the 907Gaz form cylinder, from about 65% to nigh 100%. I think it's down to operator error (or cupldity) and leakage whilst stored. For that latter reason (and because it costs far less) I prefer having my bottles refilled rather than exchanged.
This still only gives about 5%, depending on assumed max temperature allowed (and isn't that far from petrol anyway), but is undoubtedly a significant contribution.
I use something like this to check gas remaining- http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/50kg-10g-..._Measurement_Equipment_ET&hash=item5afe32b92e
also you have to consider unless you want to compress the liquid ( witch would require compressor pumps ) the empty volume of the tank has to have a area to compress into as you dont vent off when refilling gas
iN
In post #2 Why did you seemingly misquote the original post.....changing liquid to gas?
I may have my sums wrong but I reckon if you take (say Butane rather than Propane) with a coefficient of expansion of 0.0023 from -20deg to +100 you'd expand the fluid by about 27%. (Say 270ml per litre.)
I'm sure someone will be along shortly to explain why that's wrong. If it is right, the whole of the suggested 20% under-fill could be explained by catering for the thermal expansion of the liquid in the likely range of temperatures the canisters might experience.
Realistically the only time you are likely to be at risk is if full cylinders are stored in direct sunlight - something that should never be done, and not worth chancing.