Yah I saw that one and it didn't make any sense. "A" for effort thoughhttp://www.howmany.wiki/u/How-many--Btu--are-in--10--psi. Worth a shot lol
I guess that's Scientific enough. Is there no standard calculation though?1 KG of LPG =46,452 BTU's
Burn it for an hour and weight if before and after
I guess that's Scientific enough. Is there no standard calculation though?
Yes 3/4" pipe with a 0.023 mig tip inside.really fine i'll try, whats the diameter of the orifice? 3/4?
At WOT that could be true? The thing looks like its three tiger torches blowing full out all at oncehttps://www.tlv.com/global/AU/calculator/water-flow-rate-through-orifice.html
7.92231 L/H
That does not seem reasonable tho, that would mean your using like 24 L an Hour
At WOT that could be true? The thing looks like its three tiger torches blowing full out all at once
Still doesn't make sense to me. Maybe I'm missing something. A tiger torch has a rating of 500 000 BTUs. BBQs can be 50 000 easily. This thing does 10 times or more what a BBQ puts out. Thanks for the help by the way."Multiply the metric measure of liquid by the conversion ratio for propane. Since propane has a conversion ratio of 1:270, one unit of liquid propane yields 270 units of vaporous propane: 113.7 * 270 = 30,699."
I'll just stick to my "one check mark on the side of the frame per half hour of use" system lol.Just do it the first way lol
Otherwise you have determine the gas flow rate, Then covert that flow rate into a Liquid flow rate, then convert that in to KG per hour, then convert that into BTU's lol
I can't tell what it is... What does it do?
Gotcha. Thanks!It's just a gauge to tell level so you could figure out consumption.
The engineers that design the burners no doubt have a great calculation but they probably still test the designs just the way Wildman said. I'd do the weight burned per hour test.I guess that's Scientific enough. Is there no standard calculation though?
Me too!The engineers that design the burners no doubt have a great calculation but they probably still test the designs just the way Wildman said. I'd do the weight burned per hour test.