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#1
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Time to get a refill on my "J" size O2 cylinder.
I usually build a cradle out of 4x4 so it can't roll and something at the ends to keep it from sliding. This goes in the back of the Explorer. Anyone have a better scheme for moving a full cylinder? Mike |
#2
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![]() "Michael Horowitz" wrote in message ... Time to get a refill on my "J" size O2 cylinder. I usually build a cradle out of 4x4 so it can't roll and something at the ends to keep it from sliding. This goes in the back of the Explorer. Anyone have a better scheme for moving a full cylinder? Mike They are really supposed to be moved upright, only. Do you have a utility trailer that you could chain it into the corner? Chain is also the supposed requirement over rope or bungee cords. -- Jim in NC |
#3
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![]() "Morgans" wrote in message news ![]() "Michael Horowitz" wrote in message ... Time to get a refill on my "J" size O2 cylinder. I usually build a cradle out of 4x4 so it can't roll and something at the ends to keep it from sliding. This goes in the back of the Explorer. Anyone have a better scheme for moving a full cylinder? Mike They are really supposed to be moved upright, only. Do you have a utility trailer that you could chain it into the corner? Chain is also the supposed requirement over rope or bungee cords. -- Jim in NC Jim, Why does a J size oxygen bottle need to be transported upright? Is the something different about the J bottle then the FAA approved "F" bottle horizontal mount in my glider? Or the multiple welding size bottles that are mounted horizontal on a trailer at a recent FBO I visited? http://www.mhoxygen.com/index.phtml?...prd_group_id=8 Wayne HP-14 "6F" http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder |
#4
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![]() "Wayne Paul" wrote in message ... "Morgans" wrote in message news ![]() "Michael Horowitz" wrote in message ... Time to get a refill on my "J" size O2 cylinder. I usually build a cradle out of 4x4 so it can't roll and something at the ends to keep it from sliding. This goes in the back of the Explorer. Anyone have a better scheme for moving a full cylinder? Mike They are really supposed to be moved upright, only. Do you have a utility trailer that you could chain it into the corner? Chain is also the supposed requirement over rope or bungee cords. -- Jim in NC Jim, Why does a J size oxygen bottle need to be transported upright? Is the something different about the J bottle then the FAA approved "F" bottle horizontal mount in my glider? Or the multiple welding size bottles that are mounted horizontal on a trailer at a recent FBO I visited? http://www.mhoxygen.com/index.phtml?...prd_group_id=8 My supplier claims it's a Federal DOT requirement for motor vehicles. So their employees will not load a vehicle that cannot be loaded vertically. But they have never stopped me (or anyone else) from loading one myself, laying down in my pick-up. This goes for all gasses. Ox, Argon, Nitrogen, CO2, Acty. |
#5
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![]() "Wayne Paul" wrote Jim, Why does a J size oxygen bottle need to be transported upright? Is the something different about the J bottle then the FAA approved "F" bottle horizontal mount in my glider? Or the multiple welding size bottles that are mounted horizontal on a trailer at a recent FBO I visited? http://www.mhoxygen.com/index.phtml?...prd_group_id=8 All good questions, but the kicker is that it is DOT regulations for transporting bottles over the road. Your plane and the FBO carts are not on the road. I've just spent close to an hour looking for a reg to cite, but you know how it goes; when you want to find something specific on the web, you find everything but..... Still, I'm pretty sure it exists. I was able to find regs (OSHA) that requires upright transport and use, but not any DOT regs. If anyone knows of a reg and how to find it, I would like to see it, or if you know of an exception that allows horizontal transport of compressed gas bottles, I'd like to see that, too. -- Jim in NC |
#6
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I thought it was just acetelyne that needs to go upright or be upright
for 1/2 an hour before using. Oxygen can transport any way you please. In my area all the gas companies deliver. "Michael Horowitz" wrote in message .. . Time to get a refill on my "J" size O2 cylinder. I usually build a cradle out of 4x4 so it can't roll and something at the ends to keep it from sliding. This goes in the back of the Explorer. Anyone have a better scheme for moving a full cylinder? Mike They are really supposed to be moved upright, only. Do you have a utility trailer that you could chain it into the corner? Chain is also the supposed requirement over rope or bungee cords. -- Jim in NC |
#7
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Michael Horowitz wrote:
Time to get a refill on my "J" size O2 cylinder. I usually build a cradle out of 4x4 so it can't roll and something at the ends to keep it from sliding. This goes in the back of the Explorer. Anyone have a better scheme for moving a full cylinder? Mike The cylinder, if it is designed to have one, should be fitted with a cap. If not, it should have some other protection over the valve. I generally just cram in the seat of my extended cab which will not let it roll. For larger cylilnders, you can get foam blocks at any dive shop that are designed to hold scuba cyls. |
#8
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![]() "Drew Dalgleish" wrote in message ... I thought it was just acetelyne that needs to go upright or be upright for 1/2 an hour before using. Oxygen can transport any way you please. In my area all the gas companies deliver. It does say that they have to be secured somehow, or in a rack. -- Jim in NC |
#9
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![]() "Marc J. Zeitlin" wrote See: http://tinyurl.com/yvt3uj Looks to me like either vertical or horizontal is OK, judging by paragraph (1). Interesting. I was sure that upright was the only legal way. It does say they need to be secure, and if the floor is not flat, in a rack of some type. Thanks for locating the site. Then you listed: http://hazmat.dot.gov/files/gstomo.pdf says vertical or horizontal. That was for medical oygen, and is speaking directly to the situation where the bus full of old people caught fire, and the oxygen cooked all of them. Sad. Interesting that I found all kinds of links about that situation. Cryogenics look like they have to be vertical, however. Because of the need for the relief valve to be in the vapor portion of the tank, I believe. I think I read that if not vertical, the valve needs to be in communication to the vapor, or something like that. Off this subject a bit, but perhaps not too far off. How is the investigation to the explosion at Scaled getting along? Any idea when a report will be released? I'm sure you are not allowed to say much, but I (an others) are interested in seeing what caused the tragedy, and how it will be avoided in future situations. I thought you might be able to at least say what the time table for results is likely to be. I hope things are going well, with the progress on the next version. Keep on, keeping on! -- Jim in NC |
#10
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"Morgans" wrote in message
... It does say that they have to be secured somehow, or in a rack. That's so's we don't knock them over with our fire streams and bust their little heads off. Picture it. Firefighter crawls into burning room. Opens nozzle. Tanks falls away from him. Valve busts off when it hits floor. Tanks returns favor back at firefighter. Ouch! Did you se the Mythbusters episode where they decapitated a cylinder and it whooshed through the concrete block wall? Other than that, the reason to use an Acetylene cylinder while upright is that the Acetylene is dissolved in Acetone which is then infused in diatamacious earth within the tank. If used in anything but a vertical position, the Acetone may escape through the piping and hose. See http://www.airproducts.com/nr/rdonly...0/safety13.pdf Rich S. |
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