suspicious observers.
debunks crazy as it happens every year.
NOTABLE
a 5-10psi, you can close off a leak with finger pressure.
gas is compressible.
low psi gas is safe as long as you aren't playing with matches.
even then, it just makes a big flame, not an explosion.
>3012831
another hi-IQ shill
amazing nipples!
i get that.
but the weak link is, by design, at the meter.
it is intentionally weaker at the meter in case of over-pressure - so if it happens, it occurs outside the house.
the bellows if the weak link, by design.
IIRC, the meter coupling is also only rated to 50 psi for the same reason.
the pressure would probably need to be a surge to blow out so many designed failsafes.
like connecting the high pressure main and bypassing the local neighborhood pressure regulators
thanks BO.
wrong.
sorry anon.
dad worked for natgas company for 25 years.
there are weak links by design for the reason i just gave you.
but you keep on thinking what you will.
this is what scanneranon posted that made my almonds squiggle.
you ever taken your meter apart?
if not, then step off, because you are just wrong here.
why is your house "meter" not simply a regulator?
are you billed by pressure used or volume used?
reconcile that.
the volume is measured how?
answer - bladder, sometimes called bellows.
intentional weak link.
it's in every one and we used to play with them as kids.
the reason for the bladder is pressure fluctuations.
that's all I got for arguing.
moving on now.