peebee
Out of Control
There is confusion about this "is it CO2 or mixed gas"! What is "Kegland" playing at?
The Mk.4 is capable of handling very high pressure, such as in a "mixed gas" cylinder. It will or course handle the much lower pressure in a CO2 cylinder. Different nuts for different cylinders are only to prevent attaching a regulator only capable of handling a low-pressure CO2 cylinder to a high-pressure cylinder.
The other regulator connector (with hose) can be for anything, CO2, mixed gas, chlorine gas (), just anything ... the pressure is regulated (certainly <10BAR) this side.
As already mentioned, a "DIN477/BS341/W21.8" female nut is required for CO2 (UK), a male nut for "mixed gas". What these "type 30" and "type 50" nuts are is anyone's guess. If (and only if) the regulator is capable of handling the high pressure, a convertor nut could be used. I'm not entirely in agreement with these "convertor nuts" because they reintroduce the possibility of potentially fatal errors. The nuts attach directly to the cylinder ... no hose, no "wall mounts": But you can get "convertors" on hoses, which again I don't entirely agree with because of the possibility of "errors". And chain your cylinders upright to a wall so they don't fall over.
The low-pressure regulated hoses ("bus lines"), manifolds and secondary regulators can be wall mounted (but be careful, even 4BAR can be used to inflict pain!).
High pressure gas can kill, in some pretty horrific ways. Always be very sure of what you do.
The Mk.4 is capable of handling very high pressure, such as in a "mixed gas" cylinder. It will or course handle the much lower pressure in a CO2 cylinder. Different nuts for different cylinders are only to prevent attaching a regulator only capable of handling a low-pressure CO2 cylinder to a high-pressure cylinder.
The other regulator connector (with hose) can be for anything, CO2, mixed gas, chlorine gas (), just anything ... the pressure is regulated (certainly <10BAR) this side.
As already mentioned, a "DIN477/BS341/W21.8" female nut is required for CO2 (UK), a male nut for "mixed gas". What these "type 30" and "type 50" nuts are is anyone's guess. If (and only if) the regulator is capable of handling the high pressure, a convertor nut could be used. I'm not entirely in agreement with these "convertor nuts" because they reintroduce the possibility of potentially fatal errors. The nuts attach directly to the cylinder ... no hose, no "wall mounts": But you can get "convertors" on hoses, which again I don't entirely agree with because of the possibility of "errors". And chain your cylinders upright to a wall so they don't fall over.
The low-pressure regulated hoses ("bus lines"), manifolds and secondary regulators can be wall mounted (but be careful, even 4BAR can be used to inflict pain!).
High pressure gas can kill, in some pretty horrific ways. Always be very sure of what you do.