Hobart Welders
Home » Weld Talk
Weld Talk Message Boards - Powered by vBulletin

Results 1 to 10 of 10

Thread: tank "freeze"?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Pennsylvania
    Posts
    61

    tank "freeze"?

    I wonder if anyone ever ran across the problem of a tank of gas "freezing" up as referenced on this link:
    http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasc...9/gen99600.htm

    I guess if it was cold enough, the gas would come out as a liquid. I don't see how it would "freeze" unless there was moisture in the gauge, etc -- somehow.

    Just interested in any cold weather stories. Me, I would just wait till it warmed up!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Browns Valley, CA
    Posts
    8,518
    Quote Originally Posted by Bobcatter View Post
    I wonder if anyone ever ran across the problem of a tank of gas "freezing" up as referenced on this link:
    http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasc...9/gen99600.htm

    I guess if it was cold enough, the gas would come out as a liquid. I don't see how it would "freeze" unless there was moisture in the gauge, etc -- somehow.

    Just interested in any cold weather stories. Me, I would just wait till it warmed up!
    The "freeze" is not caused by entrapped moisture. High usage rates of propane cause vapor to be produced rapidly in the tank, causing cooling by evaporation.

    The intial boling point of propane (the point where vapor is given off) is -44°C. If the cooling effect reduces the temperature to a point below the initial boiling point, no more vapor is produced. The liquid in the tank is really not "frozen", just reduced to a temperature at which it will no longer boil.

    Hank
    ...from the Gadget Garage
    MM 210 w/3035, BWE
    HH 210 w/DP 3035
    TA185TSW
    Victor O/A "J" series, SuperRange
    Avatar courtesy of Bob Sigmon...

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Brethren, Mi
    Posts
    11,282
    Freezes the ambient air.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    NW Georgia
    Posts
    183
    I run into this problem all the time, even if it's a 100 degree day in july. I fool around with homebuilt jet engines. Some of the bigger ones require so much fuel that a 20 or 50lb tank can't handle it and will freeze up. Sometimes I'll drop the propane tank in a barrel of warm water. That helps some.


    As a side note, a tank of CO2 is compressed gas, not even liquified. If you put a cloth bag over the tank valve and crack it open you can fill the bag with dry ice. The cooling effect of expansion is so strong that the CO2 goes directly from being a gas to being a solid.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    The wet northwest
    Posts
    622
    Quote Originally Posted by Joe H View Post
    As a side note, a tank of CO2 is compressed gas, not even liquified. If you put a cloth bag over the tank valve and crack it open you can fill the bag with dry ice. The cooling effect of expansion is so strong that the CO2 goes directly from being a gas to being a solid.
    Uh, not true. In my paintballing days, our CO2 tanks WERE liquid filled. We had to install expansion tanks and sometimes anti-siphon tubes inside the tanks to keep the liquid from escaping the tank and entering the gun valves and freezing them up. Liquid CO2 does he!! on the elastomers inside the valve and makes the gun go 'phhhtttttt'.
    We filled our gun tanks from bulk tanks, so I don't know what to tell you there either.
    All that you are doing by capturing the escaping gas in a cloth is consolidating the cold in one place creating ice. You can do the EXACT same thing with compressed air from a standard compressor, just takes longer (AOD pumps have this happen all the time).
    I NEED MORE COWBELL!!!


    'Red' Powcon 300ST (no torch yet)
    (ok, not really a 'Red'... )
    'Blue' Miller 35 (older than me and runs great), Thunderbolt AC arc (ditto)
    'Craftsman' AC arc (who made this originally?)
    O/A x 2 (both smaller than I'd like)
    14" Milwaukee chopper
    20t HF press (crap, but works)
    Buffalo forge w/ blower
    Alot of pumps!

    "All of us know more than any of us."- TexHand

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    NW Georgia
    Posts
    183
    Haha... I knew that.. I don't know what the heck I was thinking when I was typing that. Long day I guess. I've got a 20lb tank I use sometimes for portable air power. Yeah it's definately liquid, lol.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    1,559
    Quote Originally Posted by Some Creep View Post
    You can do the EXACT same thing with compressed air from a standard compressor, just takes longer (AOD pumps have this happen all the time).
    Uh, not true, while you MAY create some ice (solid water crystals) with an air compressor, dry ice is a whole different animal. the ice created with an air compressor is water condensed from the atmosphere/released compressed air, dry ice is not condensed CO2, but solid carbon dioxide. CO2 has strange properties, one being it sublimes (changes phase by skipping a phase) going from solid to gas without becoming liquid (get it, dry ice). it also goes from gas to solid in the creation of dry ice.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Davenport, Iowa
    Posts
    824
    Quote Originally Posted by Some Creep View Post
    Uh, not true. In my paintballing days, our CO2 tanks WERE liquid filled. We had to install expansion tanks and sometimes anti-siphon tubes inside the tanks to keep the liquid from escaping the tank and entering the gun valves and freezing them up. Liquid CO2 does he!! on the elastomers inside the valve and makes the gun go 'phhhtttttt'.
    Back when I played, I used a Tipmann 68 Special that was designed to run on liquid CO2. Had to buy a special 'clunck' or siphon tube tank just so the gun would run right. That was back in the late '80's so I have no clue what they do now. Still have the gun. It was one of the very first ones built(of that type)

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Browns Valley, CA
    Posts
    8,518
    Quote Originally Posted by Joe H View Post
    Haha... I knew that.. I don't know what the heck I was thinking when I was typing that. Long day I guess. I've got a 20lb tank I use sometimes for portable air power. Yeah it's definately liquid, lol.
    Man, I feel better now! My problem is posting while in a vodka-induced stupor! Never know wht I wrote 'till the next day!

    Hank
    ...from the Gadget Garage
    MM 210 w/3035, BWE
    HH 210 w/DP 3035
    TA185TSW
    Victor O/A "J" series, SuperRange
    Avatar courtesy of Bob Sigmon...

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    The wet northwest
    Posts
    622
    Quote Originally Posted by Pumpkinhead View Post
    Uh, not true, while you MAY create some ice (solid water crystals) with an air compressor, dry ice is a whole different animal. the ice created with an air compressor is water condensed from the atmosphere/released compressed air, dry ice is not condensed CO2, but solid carbon dioxide. CO2 has strange properties, one being it sublimes (changes phase by skipping a phase) going from solid to gas without becoming liquid (get it, dry ice). it also goes from gas to solid in the creation of dry ice.
    Yeah, I know the 'dry' part of the dry ice. I meant the freezing.......

    TEK- I used an Autoc_ocker and an Automag. I still have the Automag. I played in tournaments. At one point I played on teams that held the Washington Cup, Idaho Cup, and Montana Cup all in the same year. I got a bunch of trophys.
    I ran high-pressure air. They call it running 'nitrogen', but nobody really uses nitrogen because it's expensive and easier to just use compressed air out of a scuba tank. 3000 psi.
    Fun times, until I got old and married.....LOL
    Last edited by Some Creep; 11-11-2007 at 12:23 AM.
    I NEED MORE COWBELL!!!


    'Red' Powcon 300ST (no torch yet)
    (ok, not really a 'Red'... )
    'Blue' Miller 35 (older than me and runs great), Thunderbolt AC arc (ditto)
    'Craftsman' AC arc (who made this originally?)
    O/A x 2 (both smaller than I'd like)
    14" Milwaukee chopper
    20t HF press (crap, but works)
    Buffalo forge w/ blower
    Alot of pumps!

    "All of us know more than any of us."- TexHand

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •