Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ronson Consumer Products Corporation was formerly based in Somerset, New Jersey.It is a producer of lighters and lighter accessories.. Zippo Manufacturing Company currently owns the related brands in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, and continues to produce Ronson lighters and Ronsonol fuel.
Several types of valve connections for propane, butane, and LPG containers exist for transport and storage, sometimes with overlapping usage and applications, and there are major differences in usage between different countries. Even within a single country more than one type can be in use for a specific application.
Butane in air 1970 °C 3578 °F Wood in air (normally not reached in a wood stove) 1980 °C 3596 °F Acetylene in air 2550 °C 4622 °F Methane (natural gas) in air 1950 °C 3542 °F Hydrogen in air 2111 °C 3831 °F Propane with oxygen 2800 °C 5072 °F Acetylene in oxygen 3100 °C 5612 °F Propane-butane mix with air 1970 °C 3578 °F
In the 1950s, there was a switch in the fuel of choice from naphtha to butane, [citation needed] as butane allows for a controllable flame and has less odour. [6] This also led to the use of piezoelectric spark, which replaced the need for a flint wheel in some lighters and was used in many Ronson lighters.
Mostly seamless forged metal, but for lower working pressure, e.g., liquefied butane, welded steel vessels are also used. Type 2: Metal vessel, hoop wrapped with a fibre composite only around the cylindrical part of the "cylinder". (Geometrically there is a need for twice the tensile strength on the cylindrical region in comparison to the ...
Butane, like propane, is a saturated hydrocarbon. Butane and propane do not react with each other and are regularly mixed. Butane boils at 0.6 °C. Propane is more volatile, with a boiling point of -42 °C. Vaporization is rapid at temperatures above the boiling points. The calorific (heat) values of the two are almost equal.
Wand lighter. A gas lighter is a device used to ignite a gas stove burner. It is used for gas stoves which do not have automatic ignition systems. It uses a physical phenomenon which is called the piezo-electric effect to generate an electric spark that ignites the combustible gas from the stove’s burner.
Butane (/ ˈ b juː t eɪ n /) is an alkane with the formula C 4 H 10. Butane exists as two isomers, n -butane with connectivity CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 and iso-butane with the formula (CH 3 ) 3 CH . Both isomers are highly flammable, colorless, easily liquefied gases that quickly vaporize at room temperature and pressure.