australia:gas_fittings
Table of Contents
gas fittings for camping
see also:
Introduction
- “Universal LPG appliances” can use butane, propane or a mixture of both
- other appliances are designed to use only ONE of propane, butane or natural gas
types of gas
- LPG stands for Liquefied Petroleum Gas and this may refer to propane (as it usually is in Australia), butane or a mixture of both
- n-butane has a boiling point of -0.5degC and at 21deg is stored in cylinders or cartridges at 215kPa
- iso-butane has a boiling point of -11.7degC and at 21deg is stored in cylinders or cartridges at 310kPa
- propane has a boiling point of -42degC and at 21deg is stored in cylinders or cartridges at 860kPa hence requires extra strong and heavy cylinders but is better than butane in sub-zero temperatures
- natural gas is methane and appliances operate at much lower pressures than LPG (1.1kPa vs 2.75kPa)
LPG gas cylinder fittings
- whilst you can use appliances with different fitting to the bottle via adapters such as 3/8”BSP–POL, these add extra connections and thus extra risk of gas leaks - so check the fitting before use
- you cannot in any instance join two gas hoses together as this can be dangerous
- you cannot lengthen the hose of a high-pressure stove but you can lengthen the hose of a low-pressure stove
- if the appliance came with a gas regulator (usually pre-set to 2.8kPa) then this should be used and this creates a low pressure system - no regulator is a high pressure system
- caravans often have this regulator at the gas cylinder and thus you don't need to add extra regulators into the system for each appliance connected to the gas line - these must be fitted by licensed gas fitters.
- some principles regarding LPG gas cylinders
- it is not legal to store an LPG gas inside the car except for a short trip to and from a refill
- it may leak creating an explosion risk within an enclosed car cabin or in a roof pod
- it is not legal to refill a cylinder that is more than 10yrs old you less it is re-certified
- they must be stored upright and out of direct sun
- avoid storing them on your vehicle in an impact zone - most transport them on the roof rack - perhaps tied down in a milk crate - check your local regulations!
- they are heavy a 1.25kg gas bottle actually weighs around 4kg when full
- they are hard to judge how empty they are
horizontal female POL fitting
- this is used on larger 4-9kg cylinders such as those at service stations, Swap'n'Go, etc
vertical male 3/8″ Left-Handed thread
- this is used on smaller 1-4kg cylinders such as Companion brand cylinders
Primus gas cylinder thread
- proprietary fitting used on Primus bottles that has an internal fitting that only allows gas to flow once the fitting is fully inserted into the cylinder
Australian QCC
- a new fitting which will replace POL and improves safety
Propane or butane gas cartridges
- BOM fitting propane cartridges
- designed for BOM fittings on portable appliances
- threaded puncture cartridges
- eg. Jetboil JetPower (propane/isobutane mix)
- eg. Companion butane/propane mix Pro-Fuel cartridge
- aerosol can style butane canisters
- eg. Companion butane/propane mix Pro-Fuel cartridge
- hiking gas cartridges are made light with thin walls and use a MIX of isobutane and propane - DO NOT refill these with propane only as they may explode as propane has much higher vapour pressures and requires a much stronger cartridge!
appliance fittings
smaller ¼” BSP appliance fittings
- these are used to ensure you use the correct hose eg. cast iron burners
BOM / CGA600 fittings
- used to connect to BOM propane cartridges eg. Coleman
- can be used with LPG cylinders via BOM to POL and BOM to 3/8″ LH adapters
G1/2 fitting
- threaded brass pipe fitting for gas or water connections
- external dimension of female is 1“
- internal dimension of female is 25/32”
Quick Connect 3/8" SAE
- designed for more rapid connect/disconnect
australia/gas_fittings.txt · Last modified: 2024/05/05 19:01 by gary1