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  • W.C.and Tare


    G'day all

    A 100lb / 45kg LP Gas bottle with spider web all over it sits in the back of the shed

    exif- Panny FZ-2500; 1/640s x F4,5; ISO-125; lens at 9x zoom / 220mm FFequiv

    As always, feedback welcome

    Phil
    __________________
    > Motorhome travels outback eastern Australia much of each year
    > recent images at http://www.flickr.com/photos/ozzie_traveller/sets/

  • #2
    Sharp image Phil. Too dark for me, but I'm a bit weird like that When there are dark shadows I just have to see what is hiding and when I lifted the shadows I could see the spider web a lot better.
    I Shoot A Canon

    Web: isacimages.com / My Gear / Flickr Photostream
    My memory's not as sharp as it used to be.
    Also, my memory's not as sharp as it used to be.

    Comment


    • Ozzie_Traveller
      Ozzie_Traveller commented
      Editing a comment
      All okay mate

      whereas I read the text on the gas cylinder head and wonder what the code "V316 - 86" means

      Phil

    • Isac
      Isac commented
      Editing a comment
      I used to know all that stuff Phil many years ago when I was a manager for Wesfarmers who owned our WA gas company Kleanheat Gas. The W.C. is the Water Capacity of the cylinder. You should see TW as well for Tare Weight which is the weight of the empty cylinder. All these numbers and codes vary with different manufacturers. There should be a test date on it as well.
      Just a bit of trivia: When you get your small gas bottle filled at the servo, the filler bottle is called a "Liquid Withdrawal" gas cylinder which has a tube down to the bottom to extract the gas in liquid form, not the vapour. If the liquid gas hits the atmosphere it expands to 250,000 times it size and if ignited can be catastrophic. Don't ever turn the bottle upside down with the valve open!!
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