Gas cylinders or bottles: Difference between revisions

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Further advice: https://www.liquidgasuk.org/domestic/lpg-cylinder-supply-and-return
Further advice: https://www.liquidgasuk.org/domestic/lpg-cylinder-supply-and-return


Calor Gas link - https://www.calor.co.uk/gas-bottles/buying-gas-bottles/gas-refills-exchanges-returns
Calor Gas links - https://www.calor.co.uk/gas-bottles/buying-gas-bottles/gas-refills-exchanges-returns and https://www.calor.co.uk/news-and-views/illegal-handling-scrapping-of-calor-gas-cylinders?fbclid=IwAR3hK-LFc9SSutnqZnF1dM4AkNk4_WD49i0zo1QPXU6-8Br-cvS7aVxqjYg


If a cylinder contains a gas other than LPG (propane or butane) the company that owns the cylinder, whose name should be somewhere on the cylinder, is likely to retain legal ownership and responsibility for it.  For further advice on non-LPG cylinders, visit the British Compressed Gas Association website (http://www.bcga.co.uk/pages/index.cfm) for advice.
If a cylinder contains a gas other than LPG (propane or butane) the company that owns the cylinder, whose name should be somewhere on the cylinder, is likely to retain legal ownership and responsibility for it.  For further advice on non-LPG cylinders, visit the British Compressed Gas Association website (http://www.bcga.co.uk/pages/index.cfm) for advice.

Revision as of 13:32, 13 October 2022

Information about gas cylinders:

LPG cylinders can contain either butane, largely for indoor use, or propane, which is more suited to outdoor uses. Most gas companies which supplied them retains legal ownership and responsibility for the cylinder throughout its life.

Gas cylinders are classed as a pressure vessel, so when a gas cylinder is returned to a gas supplier for exchange, they are subject to a periodic test and inspection to confirm the integrity of the cylinder itself, and the ability to withstand pressure as the gas is pumped in at high pressure which causes it to change to a liquid state.

Further advice: https://www.liquidgasuk.org/domestic/lpg-cylinder-supply-and-return

Calor Gas links - https://www.calor.co.uk/gas-bottles/buying-gas-bottles/gas-refills-exchanges-returns and https://www.calor.co.uk/news-and-views/illegal-handling-scrapping-of-calor-gas-cylinders?fbclid=IwAR3hK-LFc9SSutnqZnF1dM4AkNk4_WD49i0zo1QPXU6-8Br-cvS7aVxqjYg

If a cylinder contains a gas other than LPG (propane or butane) the company that owns the cylinder, whose name should be somewhere on the cylinder, is likely to retain legal ownership and responsibility for it. For further advice on non-LPG cylinders, visit the British Compressed Gas Association website (http://www.bcga.co.uk/pages/index.cfm) for advice.

Some local authority household waste recycling centres will accept cylinders, see https://www.recyclenow.com/what-to-do-with/gas-bottles-1 for information and a search to see if there is one local to you. https://recycling.co.uk/recycling-gas-bottles/ also has some information about recycling cylinders.



Camping Gaz - the larger bottles supplied by Camping Gaz are refillable - models R 907 (2.75kg butane), ‎R 904 (1.8kg butane), and ‎R 901 (400g butane). The smaller cartridges are disposable. The refillable models can be exchanged but the legal responsibility for these and the cartridges isn't retained by Camping Gaz, so they are able to be offered on Freegle.



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