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redmanjp wrote:Is there anyway to check this ? Usually we change when it finish completely but that's in the middle of cooking. Mom wants it changed so she doesn't have to do it when this happens and she is alone with food half cooked but it might have some days left as we last changed and if December.
hydroep wrote:Yuh know how oxygen and acetylene regulators have two gauges - one of which shows you how much gas remaining in the tanks?
Always wondered why they don't make/offer that for household LPG cylinders...:|
De Dragon wrote:hydroep wrote:Yuh know how oxygen and acetylene regulators have two gauges - one of which shows you how much gas remaining in the tanks?
Always wondered why they don't make/offer that for household LPG cylinders...:|
You does go IGL or Massy for LPG?
The convenience (for most) of the neighbourhood grocery parlour having cooking gas makes all those gauges etc. impractical.
sMASH wrote:what u can do, is run both of them connected with a y splitter. as above, when one done, turn that off, then turn on the other. when someone comes around to buy a new one, its just to disconnect just like normal, and reconnect.
wagonrunner wrote:sMASH wrote:what u can do, is run both of them connected with a y splitter. as above, when one done, turn that off, then turn on the other. when someone comes around to buy a new one, its just to disconnect just like normal, and reconnect.
does such a splitter exist for the small tanks?
i know there are some that allow two devices to be fed off one tank, have not seen one that contains the pressure of two tanks to one device.
gastly369 wrote:. Screenshot_20200218_000934.jpeg
Les Bain wrote:Long term monitoring produced a reliable guesstimation for my household. From that I got a 3 month average for my previous stove with near daily cooking and once per week baking. Current one is 2 and a half.
I have a spare 20 lb tank so the guesstimation comes in handy in cases where the spare is empty. You'll know what weekend to wake up early to catch the gas truck.
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