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Cutting a small propane bottle

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    Calamitous started this thread.
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    Cutting a small propane bottle

    Hey all,

    I've got quite a few small propane bottles used for plumbing soldering, that used to hold about a pound or so of propane each. I'd like to cut the tops off a couple to use as crucibles in my home foundry, but I'd rather not blow any fingers off.



    I've read in other thread about filling a propane tank with water, but I'm not sure how that could be accomplished on these small bottles. Does anybody have any experience cutting these up?

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    I've cut open a few of the squat one lb size tanks to make into funnels. I just used them until they would not make any sort of flame with the torch head....actually they still will make a flame for quite a while after it is not worth using for soldering. Just leave that flame running until the thing won't light at all.

    I then cut the tank with a metal cutting bandsaw. Its a slow moving blade so there isn't much chance of a spark. Never had so much as a pop with it. If you don't have one of these, I'd take a nice brand new (sharp) hand hacksaw blade and cut into the tank. Once you cut into it enough to let air into it, you should be home free to finish the cut with a sawzall or zipcut.

    YMMV.

    Jon.

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    I have also cut many of these small propane/mapp gas containers. I use them to make tool racks (shovels, rakes, picks etc.). I also use a band saw to cut them. I take a small (1/8th) drill bit and cordless drill motor, drill a hole in near top of cylinder and let it vent first. Just a added safety measure before I cut into the tank and I have never had a problem.

    Just to add to this, most scrap yards wont take these cans unless you put a hole in the container first. We use a lot of these for pipe soldering and we now recycle them as shred steel.

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    Cutting a small propane bottle

    i guess i used mine as recreation before scrapping. when they are empty ( i double check each one now... ) i simply set them on a row of posts i used a drill bit on to recess for threads to fit into to hold them straight. the next step is to take a walk... about 150-200 feet should be good i normally pace it off and call it good. after your walk you take rifle or firearm of choice and add a hole through them at will. i strongly advise no pistols as accuracy becomes an issue and people get tempted to get closer if they miss.

    just watch your backstop as even a .22 short still has enough power to punch through a car door 100-150 yards further down range after a direct hit on the tanks.

    my preffered round is .22 & .22 short due to cost and lay of land so is experiance talking when i mention distances and power to make a hole. i have found a few extra holes in a junk car i put infront of the hill i use for a backstop.

    also the distance listed is minimum. if they are not empty you just invented either a rocket or frag grenade. never had one frag on me after hundreds of them but have had a few of them rocket. i accedently grabbed a full one and after it took off i never did find it again.

    the frag grenade part was a warning given to me by a old gentleman many years wiser. i am inclined to believe it as he wasnt one to waste words and pull legs.

    so again... use a bit of common sense doing it if you do try this method. it isnt for every one but allows me to enjoy more than one hobby at once.
    "Reuse, Repurpose, Recycle..." - BC Repurposing Motto

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    BC - Just so I'm not getting confused, would this method of yours be a Reuse, Repurpose, Recycle or other use?

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    Sounds like it might fit in the recreational category.

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    Those little green and blue tanks can be refilled with a simple brass fitting that connects one end to a 20 lb tank. Then you just let gravity do its thing. I have one but haven't tried it yet. It's much cheaper to refill than buying those over priced green ones.

    On a side note (and I don't recommend this) throwing the empty one lb tanks into a 55 gallon burn barrel makes a helluva BOOM. If it's pointed correctly it shoots about 40 ft in the air also. Sometimes you end up with burning embers flying all over too.

    Burning garbage + vodka = redneck fireworks. Again, I don't recommend trying this. Leave it to the stupid like myself.
    Money is not the root of all evil, the love of money is.

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    On a side note (and I don't recommend this) throwing the empty one lb tanks into a 55 gallon burn barrel makes a helluva BOOM. If it's pointed correctly it shoots about 40 ft in the air also. Sometimes you end up with burning embers flying all over too.

    Burning garbage + vodka = redneck fireworks. Again, I don't recommend trying this. Leave it to the stupid like myself.

    Full article at Scrap Metal Forum: http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/scrap...#ixzz3P0Dp4BcT
    This reminds me of a general contractor I used to do business with. He was burning some construction trash and didn't realize there was an aerosol can in the mix. It went off like a rocket, hitting him in the back and dropping him. He showed me his back. Half of it was a nasty bruise. The frigging thing could have killed him, had it hit him in the head.

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    Quote Originally Posted by bigburtchino View Post
    BC - Just so I'm not getting confused, would this method of yours be a Reuse, Repurpose, Recycle or other use?
    I would say all three. I reused and repurposed them as targets. I sell them as scrap afterwards so they get recycled.

    as my yard requires a hole you can see day light through them to accept as scrap metal it just provides a more enjoyable way of causing required hole.

    I have tried using adapter to refill them. It works fine and a 20# lp tank will fill 15-18 accounting for loss and what you cant get out.

    Problem is i need only so many for my use. Tried selling them at not much above lp cost but didnt move enough to even pay for my adapter.

    I just find it the easiest way to deal with the surplus i aquire at times. No fuss and if one of my personal tanks is damaged or unusable i just swap a new one in and use the old one as a target.

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    If I was on my property in rural Arkansas, I would probably have some fun target practice with them TOO! So three R's and some fun are OK by me.

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    A little off topic here, other than fires and cans of burnable stuff:

    I bought an old farm a few years back and as normal on old farms, there is lots of old shzt. We had about 8 old gallon cans of paint--most were so old that they didn't even have labels. But oil paint.

    My boys and I were burning some construction waste from remodelling the house and had a brainstorm to place the cans of paint, one at a time, into the fire, carefully set upright, so they had time to heat before blowing the lid off in the hottest part of the fire.

    It was great fun! We didn't know what we would get. Some were duds, kinda poof, cloud of smoke, and a burning can of old crap. But a couple blew open and created perfect fireballs about 10 feet around. One was some kind of aluminum paint and just made a nice circle of aluminum spray on the grass around the fire.

    Jon. Off to try shooting propane bottles or something.

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    Cutting a small propane bottle

    oh my... did i start something here? lol.

    In all serriousness as fun as my method may be, use common sense and think before acting.

    i waive any responcibility if you earn a darwin award doing this.

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    Nah...don't worry--we were always this silly. We tried shooting propane bottles with 'way more than .22's long ago. Couldn't get them to do anything but appear with holes in them. No boom. no spray.

    It seems that using Tannerite is about the surest way to get a reaction at the target!! No wonder you have a hard time buying ammonium nitrate fertilizer now!!

    Jon.

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