Nitrogen vs. air...

I'm not surprised, its been 5 years or so since I last purchased one.

Are you talking about a full-size, DOT-stamped cylinder? That's 5-6' tall and a foot in diameter? Were you transporting it? How was it getting refilled? How was it getting inspected?
 
Are you talking about a full-size, DOT-stamped cylinder? That's 5-6' tall and a foot in diameter? Were you transporting it? How was it getting refilled? How was it getting inspected?
OK I made a call this morning. We are not being sold to own the very large size oxygen and acetlyne tanks. Other gases and smaller 120 cf acetlyne and oxygen can still be purchased. Dealers around here will fill owned tanks they sold you without question and so will most other dealers. If you own the tank and refill it you are responsible for costs of inspection and certification, but the gas is a little cheaper as that fee is not included in owned tank fills.

Also, gas dealers would rather you use smaller tanks as they charge much more per quantity to fill smaller tanks. Also, by seeing you more often they get a chance to sell you other supplies you may or may not need.
 
I used a full bottle of nitrogen to paint some car parts one time.. best painting experience EVER!
 
How do you do that without a monthly rental fee???

Buy the cylinder.

Or in my case a friend was cleaning out his shop and he had about twenty giant cylinders to turn in. They were all from his local welding supply that got sold to one of the big national chains a few years ago.

He gave me a couple of the cylinders and I just took them into the welding supply place and paid the exchange/refill fee and got one with nitrogen and the other with argon/Co2

I have never heard that you can't own a tank. And even though all the tanks were out of date for being hydrotested they took them all anyway.
 
2 pros for nitrogen
1) no water from condensation
2) is not effected by hot/cold temps the way air is
 
just wondering how much you need to pay for nitrogen per tyre in the states? Here is like 2 bucks 4 tyres lol
 
Seriously fellas....air is 79% nitrogen so you can keep saying it's not affected by temps as much and the molecular size keeps steady pressures but you won't convince me 11 to 12% of smaller oxygen molecules will leak out. It's the moisture content that makes the difference and you can take care of that with a dryer.

Here's one of hundreds of articles from car know it alls:

Is it better to fill your tires with nitrogen instead of air?

February 16, 2007
Dear Cecil:
I caught a segment on some car show about modding up your car. One of the things they mentioned was the benefit of filling your tires with nitrogen instead of air. Considering I fill my tires with air and don't have much of a problem constantly refilling them, what is the straight dope on nitrogen in car tires?
— Dave from Massachusetts
Oh, there are plenty of benefits: (1) Cool fluorescent green valve stem caps (assuming your nitrogen vendor has any marketing savvy), which will look sharp with your spinning wheel covers. (2) Bragging rights. OK, you were behind the curve with cell phones, iPods, thong underwear, etc. Nitrogen in tires is relatively new to the mass market. Now's your chance. (3) Reduced fire danger next time you land your space shuttle or commercial aircraft, and tell me you won't sleep better knowing that.
Most tires are filled with compressed air, which when dry consists of about 78 percent nitrogen, 21 percent oxygen, and 1 percent other gases by volume. Water vapor (humidity) can make up as much as 5 percent of the volume of air under worst-case conditions. Filling your tires with nitrogen mainly does two things: it eliminates moisture, and it replaces skinny oxygen molecules with fat nitrogen molecules, reducing the rate at which compressed gas diffuses through porous tire walls. That means, theoretically at least, that a tire filled with nitrogen retains optimal pressure longer, leading to more uniform tire wear and better gas mileage. The commonly quoted figure is that tires inflated to 32 psi get 3 percent better mileage than at 24 psi.
Does nitrogen make any practical difference? You couldn't prove it by me. I found no scientific tests showing that nitrogen-filled tires stayed inflated longer than average under normal conditions. A car-buff buddy was sure it worked but conceded he had only anecdotal evidence that it did.
As for moisture, changes in humidity affect tire performance two ways. First, the density of humid air fluctuates more with temperature than that of dry air, so removing humidity can keep your tire pressure more consistent, especially when the temperature climbs over 100 degrees Fahrenheit. That may be a legitimate concern in Formula One racing, but it's not much of an issue if you're just tooling around town.
Humidity can also be a factor in wheel maintenance - since pure nitrogen doesn't have moisture in it, supposedly your wheels won't rust as quickly, which could lead to improved wheel performance and air sealing. The question is, how big a problem is wheel rust these days? According to a few tire and wheel shops we contacted, not very. Seriously rusted wheels are uncommon in typical steel-wheeled cars, and many high-performance cars have alloy wheels that don't rust at all. One exception is work vehicles such as dump trucks, which are exposed to a much harsher environment.
Another claim I've seen is that since nitrogen is slightly lighter than air, you'll save weight and get better performance. However, we're talking about a weight difference of less than 4 percent of the gas in the tire - in other words, a difference of less than an ounce for most vehicles. A possibly more realistic benefit is that nitrogen is largely inert chemically at low (i.e., normal) temperatures, so it won't attack the rubber in your tires like oxygen does. Oxygen attack is something both the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and Ford Research have studied, and can be a problem for tires used for a long time or in rough conditions.
More important, nitrogen doesn't support combustion, which is one reason aircraft and the space shuttle use nitrogen in their tires. The wisdom of this precaution was brought home by the crash of Mexicana Airlines flight 940 on March 31, 1986. Shortly after the Boeing 727 took off from Mexico City en route to Puerto Vallarta, an overheated landing-gear brake caused a tire improperly filled with air instead of nitrogen to overheat as well and explode, rupturing fuel and hydraulic lines. The ensuing fire and crash killed 167 passengers and crew. However, unless your driving habits are of the X-treme variety, the chances of your tires catching fire anytime soon are slim.
Overall, filling up with nitrogen won't hurt and may provide some minimal benefit. Is it worth it? If you go to some place like Costco that does it for free with new tires, sure, why not? Elsewhere, though, I've seen prices quoted as high as $10 per tire, which is way more than I'd pay. Rather than shell out for nitrogen, you'd be better off just checking and adjusting your tire pressure regularly, something the NHTSA says less than 60 percent of U.S. motorists actually do.
— Cecil Adams
 
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