โJul-30-2013 07:00 AM
โJul-30-2013 04:01 PM
โJul-30-2013 03:19 PM
Dog Folks wrote:
If you don't run the refrigerator when traveling, you won't have to worry about it.
โJul-30-2013 03:02 PM
remoandiris wrote:msmith1199 wrote:remoandiris wrote:OH48Lt wrote:
X2. Never use the auto shut-off when filling a MC. NEVER. Only an inexperienced rider would do that.
I guess my 23+ years and 300K+ miles across North America and Europe makes me an inexperienced rider. Do I use the auto shut off when filling my bike? Yes. Do I top off the tank on my bike? Yes. Do I walk away from my bike while pumping gas? No, I stand there beside my bike until the the auto shut off clicks, then I top it off.
Oh, the humanity!
BTW, I don't turn off the propane either. Stay far away from me at the pumps.
So you stick the gas nozzle in your bike tank and start filling and simply trust that the auto-shut off is going to work properly when it's full? You must spill a lot of gas on your tank and down onto your engine.
Nope. Never have. NEVER. If you can't properly insert a nozzle into your tank, maybe it is YOU who has issues.
How some people can turn a simple task as filling a gas tank into a complicated process that needs a checklist and gubment oversight, I'll never know.
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
โJul-30-2013 02:52 PM
Francesca Knowles wrote:BCSnob wrote:
Show us an example of a fuel station fire/explosion caused by an RV fridge.
Okay...no "explosion", though. Hopefully the propane tank just flared off 'til empty like it's supposed to when exposed to a fire.RV owner wrote:
Binder, 73, said the blaze started as he prepared to fill up the Roadtrek recreational vehicle and the nozzle spewed gasoline, igniting when it came into contact with a pilot light on the RV.
The light is accessible through a vent on the RV and connected to a propane tank that powers a refrigerator, he said.
"...Houma Fire Inspector Mike Millet said he was able to recreate how Binder explained the gas spill, and said it was possible. But Millet noted thatโs a first for the department and heโs unsure if thatโs how the fire started...."
I think the fire inspector not agreeing with the elderly owner speaks volumes.
Of particular interest is the claim the hose started spewing gas before he touched it and "jumped out of the holder"
I'm with the inspector I don't believe it either.
Link to original story
โJul-30-2013 02:35 PM
โJul-30-2013 01:18 PM
BCSnob wrote:Having retired from hauling petroleum products, I can tell you all kinds of stupid things I have seen people do at gas station pumps that turned into horror stories. And if you search google images, you can see the results of some of those things. Stupid can't be cured!! Therefore I am extremely careful around gas stations!!! One never knows if stupid is going to be there, but the odds are in favor of them being there.
The recommendation to shut of the fridge at a fuel station is not to prevent a propane fire/explosion (like the one in FL) it is to prevent a fuel fire ignited by the propane flame. Show us an example of a fuel station fire/explosion caused by an RV fridge.
โJul-30-2013 12:57 PM
Francesca Knowles wrote:Actually, no. They do say 'No Smoking' and 'Turn off your engine', and then these dire warnings about cell phones and static electricity from getting in and out of the vehicle.
doesn't every gas pump island in North America have a label saying to "extinguish all flames???
โJul-30-2013 12:50 PM
2oldman wrote:
It's the fumes which are not hard to ignite.
โJul-30-2013 12:49 PM
msmith1199 wrote:remoandiris wrote:OH48Lt wrote:
X2. Never use the auto shut-off when filling a MC. NEVER. Only an inexperienced rider would do that.
I guess my 23+ years and 300K+ miles across North America and Europe makes me an inexperienced rider. Do I use the auto shut off when filling my bike? Yes. Do I top off the tank on my bike? Yes. Do I walk away from my bike while pumping gas? No, I stand there beside my bike until the the auto shut off clicks, then I top it off.
Oh, the humanity!
BTW, I don't turn off the propane either. Stay far away from me at the pumps.
So you stick the gas nozzle in your bike tank and start filling and simply trust that the auto-shut off is going to work properly when it's full? You must spill a lot of gas on your tank and down onto your engine.
โJul-30-2013 12:23 PM
remoandiris wrote:OH48Lt wrote:
X2. Never use the auto shut-off when filling a MC. NEVER. Only an inexperienced rider would do that.
I guess my 23+ years and 300K+ miles across North America and Europe makes me an inexperienced rider. Do I use the auto shut off when filling my bike? Yes. Do I top off the tank on my bike? Yes. Do I walk away from my bike while pumping gas? No, I stand there beside my bike until the the auto shut off clicks, then I top it off.
Oh, the humanity!
BTW, I don't turn off the propane either. Stay far away from me at the pumps.
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
โJul-30-2013 12:23 PM
msmith1199 wrote:And that would probably extinguish the burner flame.
chances of an RV explosion while filling gas from a pilot light are almost non-existent unless you shoot gas directly onto the pilot light.
โJul-30-2013 12:19 PM
Francesca Knowles wrote:msmith1199 wrote:
From the article about the Class B fire posted above:
"Houma Fire Inspector Mike Millet said he was able to recreate how Binder explained the gas spill, and said it was possible. But Millet noted thatโs a first for the department and heโs unsure if thatโs how the fire started.โIt is possible what he said happened,โ he said. โIt was a freak accident. Nobody in the Fire Department has seen that happen before.โ
Tom Freeman, the gas stationโs owner, said he doubts Binderโs account. The pumps are regularly serviced and customers have never reported a problem with the one Binder used."
I don't know make/model year of the Roadtrek in the story, but there have been a number of owner reports/complaints regarding difficulty of filling some Roadtrek gas tanks. There seems to be some kind of airlock that happens, causing nozzles to shut off, even to the point of making it almost impossible to fill the rig.
Here's one example.
I once had a similar problem with a diesel truck- I had to sorta hang the nozzle on the edge of the filltube and "feed" fuel at a certain rate or couldn't fill the truck at all. I got so could "set" the lever just right to keep fuel flowing. BUT...I found out the hard way that all those contortions would prevent the nozzle auto-shutoff from working. In my case I just had diesel spewing all over the ground while the nozzle stayed on the truck.
If the Roadtrek owner was doing something like that and the air lock occurred, I could see gas overflowing and fumes at least getting to the fridge flame. I'm skeptical that the nozzle fell out- though if it was barely in the port to begin with I guess it's possible.
All of that aside, it's worth noting that the Fire Chief only questioned the "faulty nozzle" part of the story. There doesn't seem to be any question that the ignition source was the fridge flame, which is really the point of this thread.
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
โJul-30-2013 11:56 AM
โJul-30-2013 11:40 AM
โJul-30-2013 11:35 AM
OH48Lt wrote:
X2. Never use the auto shut-off when filling a MC. NEVER. Only an inexperienced rider would do that.