Information about propane tank services can be found at SIS Propane, Propane 101, Temp Heat, Sparlings, Eagle Propane, Natural Handyman and True Point.
Not on its own. It needs a source of ignition.
Propane boils at -44F so there is 'no flow' below this temperature, it will not vaporize. The ignition temperature is between 920 to 1200F.
it is fine to use propane all winter; propane freezes at -187 C (thats 187 degrees below zero, Celcius) which is far lower that any temperature ever recorded in nature
its a pilot light, it burns the propane slowly so the propane doesnt just fill your house so that when you DO light it, it doesnt all explode. The small flame is the 'pilot light,' and it is there as a source of ignition for the propane gas entering the heater.
yes its possible
I'have found this data atTECHNOLOGY SUPPLIES LTDPhoenix House Tern Hill Market Drayton Shropshire TF9 3PXTel: 01630 637300 Fax: 01630 637302Flash Ignition Temp: 450º C.Self Ignition Temp: 465º C.
It's a ignition harness apply on the moto
because there ignition temp. is less
-187.6 degrees Centigrade (-305.68 degrees Fahrenheit) is the melting point of propane. Anything below that, and you've got a frozen propane bottle. A slightly more practical question, however, is: At what temperature would a propane bottle fail to dispense its contents? The boiling point of propane is -42.09 degrees Centigrade (-43.76 degrees Fahrenheit). So anything below that temp, and the liquid propane won't boil off inside the bottle to dispense when you open the valve. You'd be able to pour it out like a very cold glass of water.
coz the engine cant get the required ignition in that low temp
It has a flash point of about -50° F (-65° C)(lowest temp ignitable). The ignition temperature is about 495° or autoignition which it can go off without external spark source.