Optimistic Paranoid
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amwbox said:What's most likely to leak, anyways? The tank itself, or the various hose joints and connections with points of use? Seems like the heaters, cooktops, hoses, regulators, etc would be more likely to leak than the tank itself. Why is it so important that the tank be outside if everything else remains inside, I assume hooked up?
The more connections, tees, and joints you have the more possible places to leak you have. If you have enough connections, and you use them long enough, sooner or later there WILL be a leak.
A properly engineered rig will have only the bare minimum possible leaks inside, only the actual connections to the cooktop, heater, etc.
Everything else, the tank, regulator, tees, unions, and so on are outside the living area.
It's far safer that way for three reasons:
Not everyone can smell leaking propane. Just as some people are color blind and some are tone deaf, a few people are just completely insensitive to the garlic odor they add to propane.
Even if you can smell it, if you are sound asleep, really deep sleep, the odor won't wake you in time before you are asphyxiated.
Propane is only explosive at certain proportions relative to the air. Propane leaking outside CAN'T explode, there is too little mixed with too much air to reach the necessary proportion. Inside your van. a leak can build to the point that a spark will cause the van to explode.
That's why the minimum number of necessary connections inside the van is the safest way to go.
Regards
John