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It probably does, but unfortunately I wrote it down gas track. I hope that you don't need a gas license in order to purchase it, because that's going to be a problem. But yeah, I just wrote it down and let anyone know that don't use the...maybe that's the stuff he's talking about. But yeah, I used to...you know, I was really bad when...I was a long time ago. I was probably about 13, 14 years old. And we had this big gas refrigerator. It was on propane. But it was really old. It was made in the 1940s. It was a big, heavy thing. And it had ammonia. Ammonia, instead of prion, it was ammonia. And what happens is during the winter, you know, we didn't use the summer home. And in the spring, we'd have to take the refrigerator. We had to unhook the gas table, take the refrigerator, tip it upside down for an hour, then flip it over again and hook it back up. So I constantly hooked up that gas thing behind it, probably 20 or 30 times within my life. And boy, that had more kinks in that gas line than it did. I always tested it with a little bit of soap and water. I always did that. My father told me that. Always test it with soap and water. Make sure that thing ain't bubbling. Yep, yep. And you need your license to buy gas track...or gas tight. That's the other one. Gas tight's the other one. They're only sold at wholesalers. Anything gas is highly controlled, especially in Quebec. You can't even buy the damn fittings unless you've got your license. So if he knows a contractor who's still got his license, any contractor can buy it. Because they're a contractor. So if you've still got his license, he's alright. . . . . .

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