Paulbarrett
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There are literally dozens of gas mixes so it would be impossible to colour code each cylinder to the exact gas mix, the colour coding of that cylinder indicates it’s predominantly an argon mix, it will also contain either CO2, O2, H2, or a combination of these gasesI just tried a Google search for bottle colour coding, and it was about as clear as mud.
From a sample of the two in my possession.
BOC stainshield. 100% argon. All green bottle. There is an old yellow sticker on there too.
Stainshield is a mixed gas, not pure Argon
Balloon gas from BOC is a brown bottle. Heli gas are a BOC dealer next to me and they go through about 4 truckloads of helium a week….when they can get itIt is likely helium, but do check on the internet for cylinder colours - there are plenty to ser with the minimum of effort on your part. A balloon gas, is my guess.
Depends on the size of the bottleI've got a boc balloon gas and I'm pretty sure the regulator is fixed onto that one as it has a special balloon filling bit on it?
think you’re mistaken, blue cylinder with a red collar is an Argon/Hydrogen mix like Specshield 5% H2. Blue cylinder with green collar is an Argon/CO2 or Argon/CO2/O2 mix . All Argoshield mixes are blue with a green collar regardless of whether it’s Light, Universal or HeavyRed collar is argoshield universal.
Green is light, no idea what colour heavy is.
Maybe "collar" was the wrong word to use describing the red bit on the bottle valve that holds the cap on.think you’re mistaken, blue cylinder with a red collar is an Argon/Hydrogen mix like Specshield 5% H2. Blue cylinder with green collar is an Argon/CO2 or Argon/CO2/O2 mix . All Argoshield mixes are blue with a green collar regardless of whether it’s Light, Universal or Heavy