I went around the barn the redneck way.......
Most of us heat our trailers with a 750 / 1500 watt electric heaters during our winter shivaree.
Mine is approx 275 cubic feet interior ( 230 on the sleepy side w/o galley)and I turn the heater down or off after warm up to remain comfortable.
[ I have woke up to 110 degree inside temps ]
This said , and a bit of less fancy math
a watt = 3.41 btu's
A 20 pound cylinder of propane contains 430270 btu's
I found a site that calculated heating load , and for a poorly insulated 6x8 room 8' tall the heat load was 3571 btu.
During our winter shivaree's we have proven that a teardrop can be comfortable in "teen" degree weather with between 750 watts (2600 btu) and 1500 watts ( 5115 btu)
If we average these 2 numbers we arrive at 3857 btu. This is real close to the 3571 btu from the calculator making me feel good about this number.
So lets say 4000 btu are needed as a round number. 430270 divided by 4000 = 107.56 hours of run time.
Jim's numbers were spot on and the more subtle nuances were definatly factors to concider ! One simple fact remains you just can't use 10,000 btu batches of heat in this small a trailer and remain comfortable.
So by reduceing the 10,000 btu to 4,000 btu you have stretched your run time from 40+ hours to 107 +/-
One quick hint the heat will stratify at the roof. add a ceiling fan and push the air upward and wash the heat back down the walls to where you sleep for greater comfort.
OK OK not a paddle fan just a decent sized small air circulation fan. Here is the one I use.
Yep it's a see thru roof not much " R" value there
