MtnDon wrote:I only had to burp the system once to get it going. Of course if I drained the system it would need to be repeated.
It was a different application. The problem I had was the cold exterior temperature; zero and lower. Coupled with 20# cylniders the tank could not supply the volume of propane required for the heater burner. The burner would flame out. We do not plan on camping in temperatures that low with this trailer.
MtnDon wrote:Bob, IMO there is no easy / safe way to keep the propane cylinders warm when the temperatures get very low. The nature of propane changing from its liquid state to a gaseous state works against you. That process absorbs heat or another way to look at it makes the cylinder colder.... frost forms on a 1 lb cylinder as it is used, as an example. There are 120 volt AC blankets made for keeping a cylinder warm (not cheap). That needs grid power or a generator or a very healthy sized battery bank.
The larger the tank the better the cold weather performance. I have a link to some good info I complied. I think I posted it here once; I can re-post it if you want.
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