A lot of years ago when I was living in West Texas I had a 1000 gallon Butane tank,
the Butane was almost free just a trucking charge.
That tank had an actual butane burner in a skirt on the bottom of the tank to keep butane flowing in cool weather.
We used to light it when temps were going to be less the 60F.
Sure am glad you are still in one piece Lou.
Have watched lots of movies on BLEVEs, gets downright exciting when you overheat that pressure tank full of flammable gas.
impinging a flame on a single wall fuel tank is unlikely to be a NFIB approval today. Heating up the air next to the tank makes sense, which
I'm sure is what you were doing.
I like cold steels idea of keeping my cold steel warmer...:thumbsup:
Plus I have a 70 amp generator powering a 50 amp breaker through a 50 amp cord, so I have 20 amps left for the standard receptacles on the side of the gen.
So plenty of juice to run an electric blanket. Which would be a constant load which often is helpful for lightly loaded gens.
Now I wonder if they make them waterproof without costing a gazillion dollars.
Pretty soon I'm going to be building a house for this thing with hydraulic doors that open on solar sensors, the whole thing on a
turntable to track the sun... Sunshine directly on the tank has to be reasonably effective unless temps are below zero.
Then all bets are off for portable tanks unless kept in heated garage.
But I bet that tank is vaporizing a whole lot faster at 70 degrees than 30 degrees.
I can just see the cartoon in the paper where the guy is piling and lighting firewood under his propane tank.
Like the Russians still do to warm up their old trains, so they'll start below zero.