May-20-2015 08:17 PM
May-23-2015 01:45 PM
Old-Biscuit wrote:
Believe what you want Chris..........
Patent Number US7967025 B2
May-23-2015 09:40 AM
May-23-2015 08:05 AM
Old-Biscuit wrote:Me Again wrote:
Stop by and I will show you the weed burner tripping on several tanks I have.
http://www.nashwauk.net/understandingopdvalves.html
Chris
What he calls 'The Excess Flow Valve' in OPD is the spring loaded shutoff that does not allow flow w/o a fitting connected.....either POL or ACME. They hold that valve open allowing propane to flow. As long as the fitting is attached that spring loaded valve will remain open.
It is NOT an Excess Flow Device.........it is a Safety Valve that prevents propane from spewing out of a cylinder that is not connected.
Did you go to any of his links and read them...None describe an excess flow device in the OPD.
In POL and ACME but not OPDs
May-22-2015 10:27 PM
Me Again wrote:
Stop by and I will show you the weed burner tripping on several tanks I have.
http://www.nashwauk.net/understandingopdvalves.html
Chris
May-22-2015 09:15 PM
May-22-2015 07:53 PM
Me Again wrote:
The weed burner has the old style male end with no excess flow valve. It works fine on old style tanks, hard to get flow on OPD tanks.
On edit!
Found this:
New OPD style valves have several safety features built in. The least frustrating is the excess flow check valve on the tank side of the connection which is set high enough that it almost never matters. That said there is another excess flow valve in the QCC connection (the big plastic hand wheel that fits the outside threads of an OPD valve) which is color coded. Black ones are set to 55k btus, green to 200k and red to 400k. If either of these is closing you will hear it click. Just close the valve, wait a minute and reopen very slowly. If you think it’s stuck closed just bang the tank on the ground a few times then try opening it again.
Chris
May-22-2015 06:59 PM
May-22-2015 05:42 PM
Me Again wrote:
So explain how come my weed burner that screws inside the service valve has problems operating on new OPD? Sneaking up it will run. Open fast and propane flow is restricted.
May-22-2015 05:35 PM
Onespeed405 wrote:
To: Old-Biscuit
Thanks for the info.
I have those green nuts. LOL
I was under the mistaken impression that the Excess Flow function was on the tank itself. Someone told me, that if you take a full, unconnected tank, and open the valve, the valve will shut down and no propane will escape.
I guess I should be careful of "school ground" educations.
Thanks, this was a helpful discussion.
May-22-2015 04:48 PM
May-22-2015 11:42 AM
May-22-2015 10:57 AM
Onespeed405 wrote:
To: Old-Biscuit
I know the OPD is designed to stop overfilling, but aren't these same tanks the ones you have to open "ever so slowly"? That feature is supposedly designed to stop a large spontaneous discharge if the valve (unconnected) opened up on a full "not empty" tank?
I kind of used the OPD as a generic label to describe these tanks.
I welcome your knowledge on the subject.
May-22-2015 08:06 AM
May-21-2015 08:45 PM
Onespeed405 wrote:
Thanks so far gang...
Just to further clarify...
There was a already a half day of full demand on the propane.
- hot water heater (always on)
- fridge on propane setting
- 3 burner stove and oven was used
- furnace trying to light
The switch over never turned red all weekend. It was turned toward the "in use " tank.
(New info)
Prior to the weekend I filled the spare "not in use" tank, hooked it up, but never turned it on. Maybe the lack of pressure on that side of the line mattered.
I also took off the "in use" tank to weigh it. (2/3 okay) Put it back on line, but (and I already knew better) I did not turn it on slowly. I did not think I tripped the OPD since water heater, fridge, stove worked fine.
Huh???