LPG stands for liquid petroleum gas. It’s a by-product of refined crude oil. When it’s put under pressure, LPG turns into a liquid. It’s usually stored in this form. LPG is used as fuel for things like BBQs and camping stoves, as well as central heating.
Bridge Of Weir
Bridge of Weir is a village within the Renfrewshire council area and also bigger historic area of Renfrewshire in the west central Lowlands of Scotland. Lying within the Gryffe Valley and offering a crossing point for the River Gryffe, the village today offers greatly as a dorm negotiation for close-by Glasgow and Paisley although it preserves a business centre of its own and also some light industry. The very first forms of the town became with the increase of the West of Scotland cotton market. From around 1793 the river Gryffe was being used to power various cotton rotating and covering making mills. The most significant industry to emerge in the town was natural leather. At its productivity top the tiny village supported three tanneries. The natural leather industry survives to today, currently on a solitary site, in the form of an extremely successful, modern facility with five Queen's Awards for International Business.