To: brianl703
The flammability is secondary to the gas under pressure to me. Even non-flammable gas can explode if the tank ruptures wrong (I got to see a CO2 tank put a nice hole in a wall once, cool stuff but only because it only hurt a wall). The fact that there could be fire just adds to the drama
How much more often would it happen in vehicles than with houses? Houses don't smack into each other nearly as often as cars. Like I aluded to, think of how many times you've seen a gas tank ruptured in a car accident, now think about the difference with that being a bucket of liquid and a pressure tank.
155 posted on
05/09/2003 6:00:13 PM PDT by
discostu
(A cow don't make ham)
To: discostu
Natural gas tanks for mobile use are something like 3" thick, probably due to the concern about rupture in an accident.
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