I'm an electric brewer but use BBQ bottles during the winter to run a portable gas heater.
I assumed that the so called 9 kg bottles that only hold 8.5 were not full for some safety on technical reason, maybe because the filling equipment at the factory wasn't able to handle the full volume.
So I've been paying around $23 at either Masters or Bunnings.
Today I drove past BCF and see they have a refilling station and advertising $20 so I filled up there. I was assured this is the normal price not a special, and the storage tanks were pretty big so they obviously do a lot of trade.
I got home and weighed the bottle (I tare them off [edit: tare off the empties - I own four bottles] on my home scales at 8.6 kg so I can test how full or empty a particular bottle is) and wahoo I got the full 9 kg.
Using around six bottles a month for four months of the cold weather that works out at an extra 12 kg of gas worth around $25, plus an extra saving of $72 on the swap/refill price - five free bottles compared to Swap n Rort over the winter period. That would be marginally even more because I'll require fewer refills, can't be arsed to do the maths.
Even more if we get a chilly one this year.
![Eek! :eek: :eek:](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
I expect veteran gas brewers already have this worked out, but might be of interest to new adopters.
I assumed that the so called 9 kg bottles that only hold 8.5 were not full for some safety on technical reason, maybe because the filling equipment at the factory wasn't able to handle the full volume.
So I've been paying around $23 at either Masters or Bunnings.
Today I drove past BCF and see they have a refilling station and advertising $20 so I filled up there. I was assured this is the normal price not a special, and the storage tanks were pretty big so they obviously do a lot of trade.
I got home and weighed the bottle (I tare them off [edit: tare off the empties - I own four bottles] on my home scales at 8.6 kg so I can test how full or empty a particular bottle is) and wahoo I got the full 9 kg.
Using around six bottles a month for four months of the cold weather that works out at an extra 12 kg of gas worth around $25, plus an extra saving of $72 on the swap/refill price - five free bottles compared to Swap n Rort over the winter period. That would be marginally even more because I'll require fewer refills, can't be arsed to do the maths.
Even more if we get a chilly one this year.
I expect veteran gas brewers already have this worked out, but might be of interest to new adopters.