Yeah OP, you been skooled!![]()
And never intended as such. I fully understand the fear and acknowledge it as real. The source is often ignorance (not stupidity) of were the danger lies.
Yeah OP, you been skooled!![]()
And never intended as such. I fully understand the fear and acknowledge it as real. The source is often ignorance (not stupidity) of were the danger lies.
I know. Your post was very good. I was just playing.
OK, by mass the stoichiometric mixture for Propane is about 15.5:1. Assuming a new Pathfinder, EPA interior volume is 157.8 cu ft at .08 # per cu ft. Standard propane tank holds 20 #'s. Assuming 0 ventilation, your mixture once the tank was empty would be 20:12. So there was risk while the tank was leaking if the Pathfinder was air tight. It is not and the risk was minute...almost laughable.
The thing is, you were also carrying around up to 117# of much more dangerous flamable liquid at the same time contained by plastic, synthetic rubber and with a ACTIVE electric pump and electric fuel level sender right there and the wiring connections to them IN THE TANK with the liquid.
Sure, crap happens and propane can leak. But I guarantee you miles driven, that car and the others like it driven by the idiots on the roads were 1000 times more likely to kill you. I would even bet the threat of that total weight 40# metal tank flying up and hitting you was higher than the leaking gas.
Good story, but please understand that the specificity of the mixture required to even create a flash-over is so specific that you need not worry unless you are in a confined space.
Edit: gas is not more volatile, it just has a very wide range of vapor pressure/mixture at which it is flamable...the volume is the main concern.
... Your car manufacturer (Ford Pintos aside) will generally be paying careful attention to the placement of your gas tank to give it protection in case of an accident...
The pinto was an excellent case study... Unfortunately the University considered it to be such a good case study the used it in 3 out of 4 years of professional development / engineering ethics!Not quite. Unfortunately I'm an engineer by genetics, rather than by qualification![]()
Now luckily all of the windows were at least partially open. However my instinct (rightly or not) was to not apply the brakes - since the spark from the break-light filament could possibly ignite the propane gas. Instead I used the hand break to slow down enough to make a left hand turn into an empty parking lot.
You should write some screen plays! You certainty could of hit the brakes with a small propane leak of 1-2min. Heck you could of even had a smoke!
I think in the US it is not lawful to transport full tanks in an enclosed space.