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.
Yelverton
Yelverton is a huge village on the south-western side of Dartmoor, Devon, in England. When Yelverton railway station (on the Great Western Railway (GWR) line from Plymouth to Tavistock) opened in the 19th century, the village came to be a prominent house for Plymouth travelers. The railway is now shut, however the Plym Valley Railway has reopened an area of it. Yelverton is popular for Roborough Rock - a famous mass of stone near to the Plymouth road on the fringe of nearby Roborough Down, near the southern end of the airfield. It provided its name to the Rock Hotel, built as a farm during the Elizabethan period, however converted in the 1850s to provide for growing tourism in the location. The location to the south and also west of the roundabout at the centre of the village was settled in late Victorian and also Edwardian times, with lots of grand and also opulent suites. An area created at about the very same time on an odd designed parcel to the south of the Tavistock road is called Leg o' Mutton Corner. At the start of the Second World War, a landing strip (RAF Harrowbeer) was built at surrounding Harrowbeer as a competitor station for the air protection of Devonport Dockyard and the Western Approaches. A 19th century balcony of houses, currently primarily exchanged shops, had to have its top floor removed to offer a much easier technique. One high structure which was not modified was St. Paul's Church, however the tower was hit by a plane, causing a warning light being fitted. The layout of the runways is still extremely clear and although they are significantly grassed over, the many planet and also brick protective shelters constructed to secure the competitors from assault on the ground are all still in place. Some American airmen and also anti-aircraft battery devices were stationed below throughout the 2nd fifty percent of the war. A plane carrying President Roosevelt landed below when its initial location was fogbound.