L
Larry Jackel
Last week the propane tank on my 1999340 went empty for the first time.Until this year, my only experiencewith propane was with small, disposabletanks. I had no idea what to do aboutgetting a full tank.A while ago someone told me I could buya new tank at Kmart. So off I went tomy local Kmart. Once there, I was toldthat it was no longer "propane season"(gas grill season) and that the tanks wereno longer in stock. Thus began a wildgoose chase to the local NJ strip mallsto find the illusive tank. HomeDepot had tanks, but they were muchbigger than the one Hunter provided.The people at Home Depotdid say that my tank couldbe REFILLED and that a local gasstation could do it. (I had thought thattanks were like batteries ... you traded in the old one for a new one.)After much searching,I found the gas station, and theattendant refilled my tank. Hedetermined it was "full" by weighingit. But he had never seen a tank this size before and basically guessedat the proper charge.I put the tank in the truck of my carand drove home. The next evening I wentoff to install the new tank in my boat. When I hooked up thehose to the tank and opened the valveon the top of the tank, my systempressure gauge read 150 psi. An hourlater the pressure had dropped to 145psi. It kept dropping through thenight. By morning it was down to 120 psi. During this time, I kept thetank value closed, except for shortintervals when I checked the pressureusing the system gauge. Thus Iconcluded that the tank had a huge leak.The smell of propane in thelocker and in the trunk of my car reinforced this conclusion.That afternoon, I took the tank home andimmersed it in my water-filled kitchensink looking for the telltale bubblesthat would indicate a leak. But I didn't see any. Therefore I concludedthat the leak was so bad that by now thetank was empty.The next day, I brought my sick tankto my Hunter dealer, Sandy Hook Yachtsales. Ed Mahon listened to my storyand swabbed the tank with soapywater looking for leak-inducedbubbles. Of course there were none.I told Ed I knew there was a leakbecause I saw the pressure drop downfrom 150 psi. When I told him thisextra info, he explained all ---the tank has a safety valve to keeppressure below 100 psi. That valve wasworking. As a test, we connectedmy tank to the propane system of one of their stock boats. The gauge read100 psi, just as it should. This episode made me feel very stupid.Perhaps there is some documentationthat came with the boat that explains about refilling propane tanks,but I don't recall seeing it. WhenI looked through the binder thatHunter provided, I saw no info on this matter. It's possible that when I checked out the boat at commissioningtime, this stuff was explained to me,but I don't remember. If I had gas grillexperience, I probably would not havemade this mistake. The scary thoughtis that the trunk of my car wasprobably filled with propane. I amlucky there was no sparks. Certainlythe guy at the gas station whofilled the tank was uninformed.I hope this note spares someone elsefrom this experience.The more general scary thought aboutboats is how much owners need toknow to keep their boats in good shapeand safe.Unlike cars or houses, we haveto rely much more on ourselves to fix things when they go wrong.Despite reading books, magazines, andsites like this, there are always gapsin our knowledge that can lead tounpleasant results.