WVBartMan
Silver Member
The snow (10") was wet and heavy and took down some trees but no power loss, we got lucky, those around us lost it for several days.
The snow (10") was wet and heavy and took down some trees but no power loss, we got lucky, those around us lost it for several days.
Mickey,I'd rule out propane unless you already have a LARGE tank and temps don't get too cold if power outages during the winter months are a possibility.
Mickey,
Why do you see a concern about cold weather and propane?
Terry
Thanks, Joshua,In cold weather, the vapor pressure of the propane decreases. This means that, effectively, the tank runs out faster. There will still be liquid propane in the tank, but it will just be sitting there, not vaporizing, and so the lines won't be pressurized. What this means is that if you intend to have 200 gallons of propane to run a generator with, you may need a 400 gallon tank to provide enough vapor pressure to keep the propane flowing.
Yes it does, the difference is that a genset will be pulling at least as much propane as your boiler, dryer and range combined.Doesn't the same issue apply to all other uses of the propane? If it were a real issue, how could I use it to heat my home, run the boiler, dryer, range, etc.? I've never seen any issue even after days of near-zero temps.
Yes it does, the difference is that a genset will be pulling at least as much propane as your boiler, dryer and range combined.
Mickey,
Why do you see a concern about cold weather and propane?
Terry
Are you sure about your pressure settings? In an RV the pressure setting is 11-12" water column. Pressure at 12" water column is ~.47 PSI. That's the pressure all the gas appliances run on in RV's.Thanks, Aaron -
Makes sense - the genset runs on a "high pressure" (10 in. of water?) line, while everything else in the house runs behind a regulator that reduces the pressure (to 1/2 in. of water?). I was told when it was installed that they would have to run a much larger pipe to the genset at lower pressure. At the higher pressure it's a 1/4" copper line.
So, at what outside temps does this really matter? Especially with a buried tank? With a genset sized to start the well pump, freezer, and fridge at the same time, it runs at very light load most of the time. And as someone pointed out earlier, you don't run it 24/7, in our case because of the noise if nothing else. A 1000 gal tank should last a long time, I'd think, even if cold.
Terry
Not at all. I was trying to recall what the installers told me 15 years ago, and obviously got them wrong. The low pressure seems to be 10 or 12" of water, so the high pressure line is obviously more, but I don't recall a number for that. That's the pressure on the line from the tank to the regulator that supplies the appliances in the house, and it also goes to the outlet for the turkey fryer and to the genset.Are you sure about your pressure settings?
If you propane tank is buried, the temp variation isn't anywhere near as severe as an above ground tank. Nothing to be concerned about unless you live up N where the ground can freeze several ft deep.