Don, looks good under there.


hank
ris wrote:Don did you use copper or flexible line for your propane lines. I am going to mount the bottle on the tongue and need to run the propane line to the stove which is about 9 feet from the tongue and the suburban water heater about 17 foot from the tongue. My plan was to run it through the floor joists (5 inch metal) and go up to each appliance. Let me know what you thoughts are on running propane lines.
Richard
hankaye wrote:The rubber hose that Don (flboy), mentioned is designed to be used with propane systems. They have an interior collapsable inner lining that protects the system
in the event of a sudden rush of propane like a regulator failure.
John61CT wrote:hankaye wrote:The rubber hose that Don (flboy), mentioned is designed to be used with propane systems. They have an interior collapsable inner lining that protects the system
in the event of a sudden rush of propane like a regulator failure.
No that lining is to prevent the propane from dissolving "oil" out of the rubber, clogs up jets and fittings - why Buddy sells line filters.
And my statements about flex vs fixed pipes still apply, just because relatively few people get blown up each year is no reason to ignore widely known safety guidelines.
Black vs Green vs Red knobs signify maximum BTU capacity.
All modern QCC Type 1 valves have safety features, but again, follow what I said about flex hoses.
Also be aware there are huge quality differences among fittings manufacturers, too much Chinese junk to make shopping based on price safe, propane is not an area to pinch pennies.
I stick to Rego gear.
hankaye wrote:The rubber hose that Don (flboy), mentioned is designed to be used with propane systems. They have an interior collapsable inner lining that protects the system
in the event of a sudden rush of propane like a regulator failure.
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