Cap'nHandy
Seaman
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2014
- Messages
- 64
Check out used tanks, should be way cheaper. Typically you buy your propane in the Summer when prices tend to be lower, and then top off a bit in early fall, if you think you will need it, as you don't want to have to buy any in the dead of winter, but I doubt that will be a problem with cooking. Nice thing about cooking with propane, is it can double as emergency heat, you can cook, and stay above freezing even when the electric is out. For cooking only, 500 Gal tank should last a long time. As an alternative, there is also wood, but you have to be somewhat "special" to cook and heat with wood all winter. Did it for a number of years. Lots of work preparing for winter, and keeping it going. But when it is REALLY cold out, you make biscuits! When you heat a wood oven to 450, kitchen gets pretty warm. Remember one thing about propane. Its heavy, and pools. so a leak will crawl on ground. NG is lighter and dissipates up.
Lastly, any appliaces need to be set for Propane, not NG. There are sometimes conversion kits, but NG and Propane are not interchangeable so you cant jsut use a NG stove with Propane. Also, in an area with lots of propane users, you usually find more than one company that sells it, there may be price differences, discounts and other incentives available.
Hope that helps.
Blaine
Lastly, any appliaces need to be set for Propane, not NG. There are sometimes conversion kits, but NG and Propane are not interchangeable so you cant jsut use a NG stove with Propane. Also, in an area with lots of propane users, you usually find more than one company that sells it, there may be price differences, discounts and other incentives available.
Hope that helps.
Blaine