DPittman
Ultra Member
I've got one of those, but I usually just refer to as "black tape".that is why they make repair kits for them.
I've got one of those, but I usually just refer to as "black tape".that is why they make repair kits for them.
Acetylene hoses leak & get replaced or fixed all the time, that is why they make repair kits for them.
Shut off your bottles when you're done and test your hoses for leaks occasionally.
Need to run out and buy new hoses is an internet thing. It might take 50 years to degrade the hose, which probably would be degraded in that time with acetylene too.
Can you show me one example of someone "blowing up there garage" with r grade hose & propane?Tell that to your insurance company if something happens. Hose is cheap, just use the right one.
Can you show me one example of someone "blowing up there garage" with r grade hose & propane?
My torch has flashback arrestors built in, I also have a set not installed for the regs in case I use a torch without.There are plenty of instances of oxy-fuel explosions happening....let me guess though, flashback arrestors are a waste too because you've never had a flashblack? and you run your acetylene at over 15psi because you've never had it decompose? and you draw wayyyy too many btu from a small tank because it's fine?
My torch has flashback arrestors built in, I also have a set not installed for the regs in case I use a torch without.
Acetylene is expensive so I use as little as possible to do the job. And when I need to draw more BTU then my acetylene tank can safely let me withdraw I switch to propane.
So plenty examples of oxy-fuel explosions, but you can't provide 1 that was using r grade hose?
I have use propane/oxy torches since 1965 when I bought my first one. The liquid Air salesman pumped out the same stuff. and added that I would never be able to buy tips for a Model 519 torch. I looked behind him on the display wall and said "Oh, look, there goes one now!" He spun around and shuddered, and then sold me the tip and a torch. I used propane then and now, the standard acetylene regulators and twin hose. They will also tell you you can't gas weld with it. I dragged a guy over by the ear last time and welded several pieces of 4" pipe together with my propane cutting torch and haywire. But these days I don't care enough to save people from themselves.Needs a different regulator for the propane, different hoses (T I believe?), and different torch heads...almost better off just buying a whole new outfit for it.
The internet rumor was started with a grain of truth and fertilized with bulshit. The truth is that a ordinary black certified propane hose will degrade from the inside if filled with propane gas and left in the sunlight for a few months. As the pane supplier explained to me, the heat will crack the gas molecules into some chemical(forgot the names) and these attack the rubber compounds. So he said always use copper for a permanent installation.Acetylene hoses leak & get replaced or fixed all the time, that is why they make repair kits for them.
Shut off your bottles when you're done and test your hoses for leaks occasionally.
Need to run out and buy new hoses is an internet thing. It might take 50 years to degrade the hose, which probably would be degraded in that time with acetylene too.
I have a 3/4", 2", and 3" Harris rosebud tip. I have used the 3" for bending 3x7" stock and I can tell you that frost will be growing all over both tanks and regulators. Harris is the only one that I know makes serious heating tips, and I adapted them to my Victor mixer with a machined adapter and silver solder.I can attest...a cutting tip should be a propane tip...I have an old Miller-Smith torch. It is highly recommended to get the T type hose's. Acetylene hose doesn't appreciate what propane can do to it. It'll still work, but long term use will degrade the hose.
I went through Linde as well for both items. Bit of a shit show with my local outlet, but they did give me a discount for the shenanigans.
Now if anyone has a rosebud for a Miller...I'm interested
- Mike
Next mythology is Oh they use 4 times a much oxygen as a real acetylene torch. No. They Don't. The flame is loud and hisses as a result of the two piece tip design so the legend grows. The propane bottle weighs 20 times less, and is not subject to exothermic detonation and demurrage charges.
Yup but all the internet peeps who haven't tried it will tell ya it don't work!The internet rumor was started with a grain of truth and fertilized with bulshit. The truth is that a ordinary black certified propane hose will degrade from the inside if filled with propane gas and left in the sunlight for a few months. As the pane supplier explained to me, the heat will crack the gas molecules into some chemical(forgot the names) and these attack the rubber compounds. So he said always use copper for a permanent installation.
From this humble fact it grew into a monster and I'm sure some have capitalized on it....hell, I would.
I watched my boss running a tiger torch turn around to light a smoke and burned right through the tiger torch hose hooked to a 30lb bottle of propane.thats not a myth, the ratio of oxygen to propane for a neutral flame is ~4:1, it is ~1:1 for oxy/act. I run oxy/propane on my welding truck, i can tell you for sure 100% i go through considerably more oxygen than i ever did with acetylene, those pesky science types didn't lie about that one.
As for the class T hoses, i dont doubt non T hoses will degrade.....eventually....but in reality you will be replacing the hoses from normal abuse long before the hoses are ever degraded enough internally enough to be of any concern.
I prefer acetylene personally, it is a little nicer to use, hotter (higher flame temp, lower btu), but...unless you want to lease bottles, its a real pain to get.....i guess i could step back 50 years and scrouge together an acetylene generator
Bottles dont explode regularly, im not sure why that misconception is floating around on this thread, heck i know of two welding trucks that burned to the ground with acetylene bottles on them, neither exploded. Countless leaky hoses with flames shooting out the side, even watched a guy slice both hoses clean off with a pipe cut off (beveller), flame shooting out the end, no explosion. Im not saying it has never happened, but thats the most surely exception. Heck you definitely dont have to worry about the insurance company coming after you, hard to sue pink mist.
That being said, acetylene in an upturned Styrofoam cup makes one hell of a boom
I'm sure that he then realized smoking can kill youI watched my boss running a tiger torch turn around to light a smoke and burned right through the tiger torch hose hooked to a 30lb bottle of propane.
Got a little sketchy but no boom
I watched my boss running a tiger torch turn around to light a smoke and burned right through the tiger torch hose hooked to a 30lb bottle of propane.
Got a little sketchy but no boom
Every gas has an explosive range mixed with air. Gasoline is 1-15 percent with air. Hydrogen which will save the environment Bwaahhaha has an explosive range from 4% to 74% Below or above these ranges it will only burn
Below or above these ranges it will only burn