Thought I'd share this with you. On a recent trip we had no gas in the van, therefore no fridge, no hot water, no stove, unhappy SWMBO. Tried the following:
1. Swap bottles
2. Checked operation of change over valve.
Still no success. Determined regulator was blocked ( 10 years of faithful service). It was a Friday afternoon out of town and nothing close by over the weekend, so no chance of purchasing a replacement. Was suggested I remove the regulator and place in boiling water for 10 minutes. This melted out a substantial amount of oily, waxy matter.
Replaced regulator, stove lit faster than ever, same same fridge and hot water. Happy SWMBO! All still working, I now have a new regulator which I'll install before next trip.
The regulator sits just below the top of the bottles.
Now I'll slip on my flak jacket and wait for the incoming.
Cheers
Hurls
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Mark & Chris
You are only young once but, you can be immature for ever.
Had similar with a bottle in Perth . May not be that particular bottle ? It was a waxy oil solution restricting flow . The bottle didnt seem to last long gas wise . Felt heavy . Suspect it was full of oil ?
We had similar problem last trip. Gas appeared to have run out during the night. When I took the bottle off it was still half full. When I switched back onto that bottle it was ok. I presume it was the regulator and that it cleared itself . Rod.
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Rod.
Ah! The serenity
Tug - Mitsubishi Challenger, Van - Starcraft Outback Poptop..
Hurls, the regulator should be higher than the gas bottles. The gas hoses need to go uphill to the regulator so that any gunk in them will run back to the bottle.
Google for gas regulations and you will find this is correct.
All vans are not set up correctly by manufacturers, don't know how they pass inspection.
Hurls, the regulator should be higher than the gas bottles. The gas hoses need to go uphill to the regulator so that any gunk in them will run back to the bottle.
Google for gas regulations and you will find this is correct.
All vans are not set up correctly by manufacturers, don't know how they pass inspection.
Barry
Bazza, Caravan manufacture is a self regulating industry in Australia - no inspections when new.
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Possum; AKA:- Ali El-Aziz Mohamed Gundawiathan
Sent from my imperial66 typewriter using carrier pigeon, message sticks and smoke signals.
Just had a look at our regulator position . Its 100mm down from tap . Ahh its hard piped so moving it higher isnt easy . Even the experts dont get it right !! Notice it came good in warner weather . I guess less viscosity?
Possum that may hold in USA but in Australia LPG is propane and nothing else. Check out the Elgas web site for your own information. The gunk in the regulator is more likely due to breakdown of hoses or seals than out of the gas bottle.
Possum what you say about the gas tanker filling both is because both are propane and neither are LNG. Propane and LNG are not interchangeable in either gas appliances or vehicles as they require different pressures and/or different air/fuel ratios.
A friend who worked in a senior position in the Qld Ampol refinery in Qld. for 20 years told me that the 'oily gunk' that collected in the regulator was from the additive that is used to give the gas a smell in case of leaks.
A LPG gas expert suggested that 7 years was the lifespan of a regulator.
Had this with mine too.
fridge wouldn't start and stove was like it was on low at best.
Pulled the regulator and some sort of liquid came out.
Mine is atop my gas bottle, so is positioned correctly.
I did notice the old one had a small hole, which I assume is for a pressure release and this was facing upward.
When I installed the new one, I made sure this hole was pointed downward, as to not take on rain water etc .
Only 40 odd bucks I think and everything is back to normal.