Apologies in advance for beating a dead horse here, but I did ask around a little and got a few responses from people who know way more about this than I do. Only a few responses so far, 2 to 1 in favor of turning off the fuel line first, but this is not enough responses to to mean anything from a statistical perspective. I have pasted a response from a welding instructor below that is interesting,
"I have taught welding for 19 years now and I have also heard both sides of the argument, but the final arbiter for me is Harold who owns Hansen & Miller Torch and Regulator Repair.
The basic argument for shutting off the oxygen first is that it prevents a backfire from causing soot to build up inside the torch head.
Harold counters this with a story of one of his clients.
At the end of the day, the fellow shut off his torch Oxygen first, then coiled up the hose and hung the torch on the regulator.
He went home, and about 4 hours later his tank set exploded, taking out a section of his shop.
The forensic investigation of the torch showed it had a tiny leak on the fuel gas valve.
When he shut off the oxygen the fuel leak allowed a tiny flame to keep burning at the torch tip.
So small he didn't notice it.
For 4 hours that tiny flame was heating the side of his oxygen cylinder until the tank wall failed, rupturing the cylinder.
If he had shut off the fuel gas first the excessive oxygen would have snuffed out the flame.
So for me it is fuel gas on first, fuel gas off first.
And FYI soot will build up inside every torch and fuel gas hose due to carbon condensing and dropping out of solution with the fuel gas.
It is one of the reasons for replacing your hoses on a regular basis."
Anyway, for anyone interested, the full thread can be referenced here,
http://tinyurl.com/njztkgp
Alistair.
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