Difference between revisions of "CO2 Cylinder Tank"
From Free Knowledge Base- The DUCK Project: information for everyone
(Created page with "CO2 tanks come in a range of CO2 cylinder sizes and volumes; from a basic 5lb co2 tank all the way up to a large 50lb co2 tanks. File:Co2-Tank-imagefromsleezysourcesowhat.j...") |
m |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
[[File:Co2-Tank-imagefromsleezysourcesowhat.jpg]] | [[File:Co2-Tank-imagefromsleezysourcesowhat.jpg]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | As compared to other types of tanks, specifically, for example, a propane tank: CO2 cylinders have much thicker walls than propane cylinders. Propane cylinders are 250 p.s.i. max pressure, CO2 cylinders are normally 1800 p.s.i. At 100 degrees F. propane exerts about 170 p.s.i., while CO2 exerts about 1400 p.s.i. Even at room temperature a full CO2 cylinders runs about 850 p.s.i. |
Revision as of 10:46, 11 February 2024
CO2 tanks come in a range of CO2 cylinder sizes and volumes; from a basic 5lb co2 tank all the way up to a large 50lb co2 tanks.
As compared to other types of tanks, specifically, for example, a propane tank: CO2 cylinders have much thicker walls than propane cylinders. Propane cylinders are 250 p.s.i. max pressure, CO2 cylinders are normally 1800 p.s.i. At 100 degrees F. propane exerts about 170 p.s.i., while CO2 exerts about 1400 p.s.i. Even at room temperature a full CO2 cylinders runs about 850 p.s.i.