Gas Shutoff Is a Quarter-Turn — Perpendicular Means Closed
Claim: The gas meter’s main shutoff valve is a ball valve. One quarter-turn (90°) in either direction closes it completely. The single orientation test: handle parallel to the pipe = open, handle perpendicular (crosswise) to the pipe = closed.
Mechanism
A ball valve contains a sphere with a hole through it. When the hole aligns with the pipe (handle parallel to the pipe), gas flows through. When the sphere is rotated 90°, the solid wall of the sphere blocks the pipe — gas stops. The quarter-turn is a hard mechanical stop in both directions; over-turning past 90° accomplishes nothing and can break older valves.
How to operate it:
- Place an adjustable wrench or dedicated gas shut-off wrench on the valve handle (or the tang/flat stub on older valves without a handle).
- Turn one quarter-turn in either direction.
- Confirm the handle (or tang) is now pointing across the pipe, not along it.
- That is the closed position. Do not attempt to verify by sniffing at the valve — move away.
Visual test (works for any ball valve in your home): when a ball valve handle is parallel to the pipe it’s controlling, it’s open. When it’s perpendicular, it’s closed. This is the same mechanic for gas, water supply, and most in-line shutoffs.
Why it matters for preparedness
The quarter-turn rule means the shutoff takes about five seconds once you have the wrench on the valve. The bottleneck in an emergency is not the valve — it is:
- Knowing where the meter is before the emergency
- Having the wrench accessible (not buried in a tool kit)
- Making the correct decision to leave first and operate the valve after, if at all (see When the Gas Smell Is Strong, Leave First — Shutoff Is Secondary (Home Systems))
Scope
This covers the main shutoff valve beside the FortisBC meter. The same mechanic applies to individual appliance shutoff valves (the valve behind a range or furnace). It does not cover older gate valves (which require multiple turns) — if your meter’s valve has a round wheel rather than a handle or tang, it is a gate valve; call FortisBC for guidance, as gate valves are uncommon on modern gas meters.
Idea Compass
North: Where this comes from
- gas-meter-shutoff (Home Systems) — the component note this procedure lives in
- Ball valve mechanics (standard plumbing/gas engineering) — the quarter-turn is a design property of all ball valves
East: Tensions / failure
- Do Not Turn Gas Back On Yourself — FortisBC Must Inspect After Any Shutoff (Home Systems) — the asymmetry: the same quarter-turn that closes the valve must NOT be used to open it after an emergency
- A stiff or corroded valve handle — if the valve has not been exercised in years, it may be hard to turn; forcing it risks snapping the fitting. Call a licensed gas fitter before an emergency if the valve appears corroded.
South: Where this leads
- emergency-shutoffs (Home Systems) — the water main shutoff uses the same quarter-turn ball valve mechanic in many modern installations; knowing one helps you learn the other
West: What’s similar
- Water supply shutoff valves (in-unit and building main) — same ball valve mechanic; perpendicular to pipe = closed is a consistent visual shorthand across gas and water shutoffs