30Bones
Well-Known Member
Only reason I didn't drill the stock orifice out was I wanted to regulate the flame with a valve and that's where the brewers hardware units shine for the $$
I have been seriously thinking about doing this. My house uses NG for the stove and i brew in the detached garage using propane. There's a gas line under the house to the stove about 20' from where i brew. I might have someone come out and quote the install, ill bury the lines myself!
My experience with working with heaters and water tanks, propane is more dangerous and ignitable at no pressure and dirtier than natural gas where as natural gas is normally ran at lower pressures 12 to 20 psi and has to be compressed to minimum of 5 to 20 pounds pressure to ignite depending on has service, my question is we would install propane tanks in a natural gas supply and it would but hotter because natural gas has smaller orfices cause it's cleaner and propane needs bigger orfices to not plug up so what type of burner do you have propane or natural gas, I would like to use propane Burners with natural gas supply to allow more gas to come out for a 90 gallon boil
Where would I find one of these charts. I bought 2 20 tip jet burners and drilled them with a 15 gauge drill bit. Worked great. Bought another cheap 23 tip burner and drilled it out with the same bit and I get a lot of suet. I know I'm not getting enough air. Not sure how to remedy the 3rd burner.
My experience with working with heaters and water tanks, propane is more dangerous and ignitable at no pressure and dirtier than natural gas where as natural gas is normally ran at lower pressures 12 to 20 psi and has to be compressed to minimum of 5 to 20 pounds pressure to ignite depending on has service, my question is we would install propane tanks in a natural gas supply and it would but hotter because natural gas has smaller orfices cause it's cleaner and propane needs bigger orfices to not plug up so what type of burner do you have propane or natural gas, I would like to use propane Burners with natural gas supply to allow more gas to come out for a 90 gallon boil
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The soot is a result of incomplete combustion which sounds to me like you are not getting enough air actually.
What is the btu/t rating of your burner?