Gas Grill Problems

   / Gas Grill Problems #1  

PTRich

Gold Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2001
Messages
262
Location
Willington, CT
Tractor
Power Trac PT425
I have a large grill that I have developed a problem with. When I first light the grill it is fine but quickly the flame gets very small. I put a new tank on and the flame got big again, then quickly got small and went out. The regulator is only a few year old, I replaced it. Also it is cold here. I thought maybe the regulator was frozen? The gas had moisture witch froze the regulator?

PTRich
 
   / Gas Grill Problems #2  
Since you said "it is cold here" I'm gonna take a stab and say you have a problem with the tank not being able to evaporate sufficient gas to sustain the flame.
Propane will not evaporate at -20 degrees.
Had a similar problem years ago with propane fired salamanders, we had to move the tanks inside the building to warm them sufficiently to sustain the fire.
 
   / Gas Grill Problems #3  
How big is your tank and how large is your grill? Did you see any frost on the outside of the regulator or tanK?
If you start the grill off at low flame will it maintain this flame? What was the outside temperature?

Egon
 
   / Gas Grill Problems
  • Thread Starter
#4  
The tank is a 20lb, it was 20 degrees out and my grill has 4 cast iron burners. There was no ice apparent any where.

Thanx, PTRich
 
   / Gas Grill Problems #5  
I'd switch to a Weber kettle using charcoal and you will not have these problems!!

Dan L
 
   / Gas Grill Problems #6  
Is it possible to turn your tank upside down and then try it.

Egon
 
   / Gas Grill Problems #7  
<font color=blue>Is it possible to turn your tank upside down and then try it.</font color=blue>

I don't think you want to try that. Remember you want it to come out of the bottle as gas; not liquid.
 
   / Gas Grill Problems #8  
PTRich,
Yes, it could be moisture freezing up the regulator. That would be from contaminated LP gas, but since you said you changed bottles that tends to rule that out unless they came from the same place at the same time. What is more likely is the bottle's vapor pressure is dropping off to nothing if you are placing a high demand on it. From your description it sounds like you have a high output capacity grill. Are you using just one burner or all four? You could try placing the bottle in a tub of *warm* water. Not hot! Very important only 90 degrees or less a 1/2 hour prior to using. Never invert a propane bottle that is hooked up to an appliance. 20 degrees outside..... don't know what your fixin', but it must be good /w3tcompact/icons/wink.gif.
 
   / Gas Grill Problems #9  
Bird:
Figured that comment would get lots of response. It's not intended as a normal operating procedure but to check and see if the float is shuting off the tank. The regulator should not care if it sees liquid or vapor as the head differential for a foot or so of C3 should make little difference.

Egon
 
   / Gas Grill Problems #10  
I would say that you probably have a frozen regulator due to moisture in a previous tank of propane. When a regulator typically freezes, the ice forms a restriction at the orifice. What you are most likely seeing is that when you initially turn the grill on, the grill is using the gas that is stored in the line between the regulator and the shutoff valves on the grill. What happens is that the restriction is not stopping the the flow completely and therefore once you shut the grill off the line builds back full pressure, but when you turn the burners on you quickly run out of adequate flow due to the restriction. The easiest way to solve the problem is to take a bucket of real warm water to the grill with you next time you go to light it. Light one burner then slowly pour the warm water over the regulator. This should melt your restriction and because the gas is flowing it will carry the moisture out past the burner. Whatever you do do not use any type of open flame to thaw the regulator. Most regulators use a rubber diaphragm and they are fairly easy to melt. When that happens the gas gets by at full pressure and the results will be that you will have a gas grill that looks like it was meant for barbecueing whole elephants. You can use a hairdryer to thaw the regulator but be extremely careful if there is snow on the ground. Good luck.

Jimmy
 

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