When I worked for the trash company we used to do the same remove valve and scrap it then our scrapyard said that they had to have a large hole or cut in half. Reason being in the pile couldn't tell if one still had a valve easily. So we find this guy who had a business disposing of tanks and would come take them. I asked him one time how he did it. He explained that he takes the valve out and then leaves them upside down for a few weeks, he then has a steel plate that stands vertical and he reaches around from behind the plate and cuts a hole in it with a torch. I couldn't believe how dangerous this sounded but he assured me only once in a while do they make much of a woof or shoot a few ft away like a small rocket....I won't be trying that method nor would I recommend it but he did hundreds of tanks a year just from us and have was still alive!
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Today's Featured Article - A City Guy's First Tractor - by Fred Hambrecht. After living in apartments in Atlanta for more years than I care to remember, the wife and I decided to move to the country. Humming "Green Acres is the place for me..." we purchased a 29 acre tract about 60 miles south of Atlanta. Next came the house, I could talk about that ordeal for another two weeks... But, I want to talk about my tractor! We didn't even own a lawnmower, and all of a sudden we had enough grass to feed all the starving children of the bovine world. Naturally, I talked
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