Here’s the setup: It’s a rural house in the middle of nowhere. I’ve got a small stove/oven combination that is connected to a propane line that runs under the house about 30 feet where I connect it to a propane tank.
Typically a tank lasts for about 2 months. Lately, it last 2 weeks. There has to be a leak somewhere. I don’t smell propane in the house or around the tank. Is there a device that will push air through the line and help me figure out where the leak is?
If you have a large tank, 250 or 500 gallons that’s filled from a truck, I’d contact those folks and ask for help. There are electronic sniffers that can trace for leaks, but only the service folks or fire department would have those.
Otherwise you’d mix up soapy water and trace the line slopping the soapy mixture on with a brush and looking for bubbles.
Propane is heavier than air so will tend to collect in low spots. It also is not breathable in high concentrations, so be very careful of confined spaces or low areas. Make sure you have someone there to watch and ensure you don’t run into trouble.
No, it is not a large tank filled professionally. I’ve never heard of this soap trick. You say I should mix up soapy water, brush it on the outside of the line at the fittings and check for bubbles?
Not to be dense, but wouldn’t there be bubbles everywhere in soapy water?
Thanks. Right now, the tank is empty and disconnected, so no danger of propane collecting right now. This weekend we will be doing all of the cooking on the grill. But when I get the tank filled and reconnected, I want to start right away at finding the leak.
sort of, but when you mix it don’t agitate it into suds. use a spray bottle and wet down all exposed lines, clamps, crimps and valves. if there’s a leak, you’ll see bubbles forming at the source. They might be very fine bubbles if the leak is tiny, or big ones if it’s more substantial.
n.b. the reason the water needs to contain soap is so it can “wet” the surface more completely, and actual form stable bubbles.
There will be some bubbles, but you aren’t putting ‘lather’ on the fittings. That is, you’re putting on water containing soap; not a bubble bath. If gas is escaping, then the soapy water at the leak will be bubbling. The purpose of the soap in the water is to make the bubbles more visible than the ones that would be there if you used plain water.
a leak at the tank or stove should be smellable it takes very little to smell it, even a loose fitting will have enough to smell. checking the exposed line and fittings will indicate a leak with bubbles.
the line is already pressurized with propane to help you find a leak. if the leak is underground you will need to replace the length of line.
Sounds dangerous. If you can afford it, hire a professional to “sniff” the line and locate any potential leaks. He will use a gas detector to do the “sniffing”, not his nose, btw.
Around here, before the Fire Department will sign off a new propane line, you must put a gauge/valve on one end, block off the other and put air pressure in the line while they stand there and make sure it won’t leak down over 15 mins or so. The fittings are less than $10 at the hardware store and you can pump up with a small compressor or bike pump. This will ideally eliminate digging up the line and leave you with just the above ground fittings for the soap test.
A good old-fashioned propane house blast will level your house and kill your ass. Do not mess around here.