โNov-06-2016 04:13 PM
โNov-13-2016 03:20 PM
โNov-13-2016 08:10 AM
thomas201 wrote:
I like another poster used Honda gasoline engines converted to natural gas at work. We used casing head gas to run pump jacks in the oilfield.
They were a royal pain. Lots of failures. Problem assigned to engineer (me). Root cause, gasoline engine cooling assumes that you lose a lot of heat by evaporating the gasoline. Running at max horsepower without this additional cooling equals trashed engines.
If you do light duty they will last a long time. Running and pulling all the power they got, you will junk the engine on propane.
You need a propane engine designed from the start with propane in mind for heavy continuous duty.
โNov-13-2016 06:55 AM
thomas201 wrote:
If you do light duty they will last a long time. Running and pulling all the power they got, you will junk the engine on propane.
You need a propane engine designed from the start with propane in mind for heavy continuous duty.
โNov-13-2016 03:49 AM
โNov-10-2016 01:23 PM
โNov-10-2016 12:06 PM
Coach-man wrote:SabreCanuck wrote:
I think I was thinking more along the lines of leveraging the 3 tanks already on the trailer and the BBQ quick connect. Also remember it is still TRI mode if you chose to use gas. I guess it all depends on how often you are using that generator and all the gas in the jerry can.
So, you never use the stove, turn off your fridge while you travel, and never ever use the furnace? If you use any of those things you WILL have to fill your propane tanks, if you add a generator, you will have to refill a little sooner! To have the extra step of getting and then storing gasoline is silly at least for me! Add in the benefits of running on propane, much longer times between oil changes, much cleaner burning than gasoline, no gummed up carburetors or sticking injectors, almost never have to change spark plugs, not worries of the tank rusting, no spilling gasoline, no stinky gasoline tanks in the bed of the TV or basement, this to me would far out weigh having to get your propane tanks refilled once in a while!
โNov-10-2016 07:33 AM
SabreCanuck wrote:CampbellDaycruiser wrote:352 wrote:CampbellDaycruiser wrote:
IMHO propane is the most trouble/hassle to fill of all the fuels we use: for some reason I have no problem with taking a 5 gallon plastic gasoline can to be filled, but I feel like doing the same with a propane tank is being a real PITA. Stopping at a gas pump and squirting a few gallons into a can without having to go inside and find an employee to fire up the propane dispenser seems a whole lot simpler.....
Your kidding right?
Nope. My plastic gas can sits flat and does not roll around the truck like propane tanks, does not scratch what I set it on and does not have to be unstrapped and lifted out of a fitted base in a compartment that's just a bit too tall and too narrow to manage comfortably. It also weighs so much less than a propane tank when empty that my wife is even willing to carry it out to the truck for me if my hands are full......sometimes. If I need a refill I just swipe my card a second time at the pump when I'm filling the diesel truck, fill them both at once, set the filled plastic can in the bed of the truck and we are on our way.
I think I was thinking more along the lines of leveraging the 3 tanks already on the trailer and the BBQ quick connect. Also remember it is still TRI mode if you chose to use gas. I guess it all depends on how often you are using that generator and all the gas in the jerry can.
โNov-10-2016 04:55 AM
โNov-09-2016 09:00 PM
CampbellDaycruiser wrote:352 wrote:CampbellDaycruiser wrote:
IMHO propane is the most trouble/hassle to fill of all the fuels we use: for some reason I have no problem with taking a 5 gallon plastic gasoline can to be filled, but I feel like doing the same with a propane tank is being a real PITA. Stopping at a gas pump and squirting a few gallons into a can without having to go inside and find an employee to fire up the propane dispenser seems a whole lot simpler.....
Your kidding right?
Nope. My plastic gas can sits flat and does not roll around the truck like propane tanks, does not scratch what I set it on and does not have to be unstrapped and lifted out of a fitted base in a compartment that's just a bit too tall and too narrow to manage comfortably. It also weighs so much less than a propane tank when empty that my wife is even willing to carry it out to the truck for me if my hands are full......sometimes. If I need a refill I just swipe my card a second time at the pump when I'm filling the diesel truck, fill them both at once, set the filled plastic can in the bed of the truck and we are on our way.
โNov-09-2016 08:58 PM
352 wrote:
HEREol Bombero-JC wrote:
Not sure what "kit" you mean... US Carb, or?
(I prefer Maine Diesel - send 'em your carb, returned "converted" with regulator, and necessary parts).
Converted my Yam 2400is to tri-fuel - with no intent to ever run it again on gasoline.
Works great for me - nat gas at home, propane (in needed) "on the road".
No problems *ever* with contaminated or "old" gasoline, no need for Seafoam or StaBil.
BTW - you might take your question to the Tech Forum (or ask the mod to move it) - as *everything* generator is there.
~
โNov-09-2016 06:59 PM
CampbellDaycruiser wrote:352 wrote:CampbellDaycruiser wrote:
IMHO propane is the most trouble/hassle to fill of all the fuels we use: for some reason I have no problem with taking a 5 gallon plastic gasoline can to be filled, but I feel like doing the same with a propane tank is being a real PITA. Stopping at a gas pump and squirting a few gallons into a can without having to go inside and find an employee to fire up the propane dispenser seems a whole lot simpler.....
Your kidding right?
Nope. My plastic gas can sits flat and does not roll around the truck like propane tanks, does not scratch what I set it on and does not have to be unstrapped and lifted out of a fitted base in a compartment that's just a bit too tall and too narrow to manage comfortably. It also weighs so much less than a propane tank when empty that my wife is even willing to carry it out to the truck for me if my hands are full......sometimes. If I need a refill I just swipe my card a second time at the pump when I'm filling the diesel truck, fill them both at once, set the filled plastic can in the bed of the truck and we are on our way.
โNov-09-2016 05:09 PM
352 wrote:CampbellDaycruiser wrote:
IMHO propane is the most trouble/hassle to fill of all the fuels we use: for some reason I have no problem with taking a 5 gallon plastic gasoline can to be filled, but I feel like doing the same with a propane tank is being a real PITA. Stopping at a gas pump and squirting a few gallons into a can without having to go inside and find an employee to fire up the propane dispenser seems a whole lot simpler.....
Your kidding right?
โNov-09-2016 01:55 PM
CampbellDaycruiser wrote:
IMHO propane is the most trouble/hassle to fill of all the fuels we use: for some reason I have no problem with taking a 5 gallon plastic gasoline can to be filled, but I feel like doing the same with a propane tank is being a real PITA. Stopping at a gas pump and squirting a few gallons into a can without having to go inside and find an employee to fire up the propane dispenser seems a whole lot simpler.....
โNov-09-2016 01:54 PM