Sunday, February 26, 2012

Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter

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Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter


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Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter
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Average Customer Review:


Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter
One pound propane tank refill adapter with male soft nose P.O.L. and female 1"x20 throwaway cylinder thread refills 1 lb. bottles in one minute or less.../ Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter / gas can hose

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Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter
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Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter
  • Canada restricted
  • All brass construction
  • Easily refill one pound bottles
  • Soft nose POL
  • Fits all one pound tanks
  • Refill one pound bottles
.../ Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter / gas can hose

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Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter
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Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter
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Customer Review :

Good but only fills about 1/2 way : Mr. Heater F276172 Propane One Pound Tank Refill Adapter


I have had this or a similar product for several years now. I live in the mountains, and go camping a lot, and sometimes set up camps and leave, going to work, backpacking, etc, and dont return until night or even a few days. I had two small bulk containers, one for a propane lantern, and one for a little heater and both were stolen out of my closed tent. Since the small refillable propane tanks (small bulk tanks cost more than the regular 5 gallon bulk tank) are expensive, I switched back to the 16 oz type disposable type. I have messed with all different ways of refilling these babies, and here are my suggestions and results.
1. If you only camp once a year (or twice), just spend the $3 each on a couple new 16 oz disposables and be done with it. If you set up "big hunting type camps" you are probably going to have a big bulk tank or 2 anyway, with a propane tree on it or some similar setup for lanters, cooking, etc. or more than likely, have a trailer, and you probably don't need advice from me anyway.
2. Though you can get a complete (and even a little over) fill by pulling the little "bicycle valve" overflow protection valve while filling, these tanks are not really ment for that, and frequently enough (one out of 4 tanks maybe, my experience ... maybe one out of every 6) this valve, once pulled out, will leak, and the tank and refill will be useless. Even though the tanks are filled all the way, I do not recommend this due to the higher percentage of leakers.
3. I recommend following the instructions, which requires putting the bulk 5 gal. tank in the sun for a few hours (let it get nice and warm), and the little 16 oz tanks in the freezer, using temperature differential as a pump. Then, grab one tank from the freezer and attach to the refill device/bulk tank, make sure everything is decently tight, and open the valve on the bulk tank (which is upside down - I usually do it on the tailgate of my Toyota Tacoma). You can hear the propane going into the small tank, and when it seems like its not going to get any fuller - usually around 45 seconds to a minute, shut of the big tank valve and unscrew the little one, and go and get another nice cold one from the freezer (little propane tank, not beer). When I first started refilling them, I weighed them to see how much propane I got in the little tank. When I was a newbee, and didn't know what I was doing, and didn't have enought temperature difference, I wouldn't get hardly any liquid propane in. Then I learned the "pull out the bicycle valve trick" and found I could fill them even a little more full than new, by weight on a postal scale. Now and finally, I just put the big tank in the sun, and the little ones in the freezer, and I don't weigh them anymore, but my "picking them up" scale tells me that they are probably somewhere about 1/2 full, or a little more. This is enough for me, for just one single mantle lantern and one propane stove. Usually they don't leak if you don't mess with the overpressure protection valve.
Lastly, a couple things to keep in mind (principles of propane refill) - propane is always at a constant pressure, at a certain temperature. As some of the gas escapes, or is burned, the pressure that would drop is refilled by propane gas which has expaned from some of the liquid. Therefore, if both tanks were equal in temperature, and you hooked one to the other and opened the valve, (assuming the big tank is upside down so the liquid proane is comming out and not gas - if you refill with just gas, you might get 30 seconds worth of gas into the little tank, which is basically nothing and not what you are looking for) the smaller one would only get maybe 5% or 10% full, untill both tanks were under the same pressure. The object is to get as much "liquid" propane in. The more temperature differential, the more liquid you will get in, because the pressure will be lower in the cold tank. Of course, the bicycle valve trick works great (wear gloves on your right hand, because the propane gas is cold when it comes out/evaporates, and no smoking). But, because they weren't made for that, seem to have a hard time seating themselves again, even when pushed in, etc. Now that I've been refilling these little babies for a few years, it seems so quick and easy, and probably saves a few bucks, and is better for the environment not throwing away a decent little tank.
So, summary - yes these work fine, but anticipate only about 1/2 full (or slightly more) small tanks.

Oh, and lastly about the no smoking comment - I stand by that, but propane gas is heavier than air (which is why you can't use propane appliances in your basement) and goes down when leaking. I've had a little leaking tank within 2' maybe of a flame which was higher and screened, and it didn't catch, but I was watching it closely, and threw the tank away shortly thereafter. Try that with gasoline fumes, and you will find yourself in a big explosion of flames!

Sorry for the long review, hopefully it will be kinda helpful.

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