Tank failing Visual, shop condemned the tank?

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

In the U.S., the law is that pressurized gas tanks need to be inspected by licensed test facilities, and only they have the authority to condemn a tank. Dive shops have no such authority! It doesn't matter one iota if they have taken any private courses (like PSI) on scuba tank inspection, those are basically meaningless in terms of the law allowing them to disable or disfigure customers' tanks. What they can do is refuse to fill them or put their sticker on the tank. That's it. In fact, they can refuse to fill any tank, for any reason. They own the compressor. But they do not own your tank.

Find another shop and hope that the next one isn't even worse, hehe.
 
In the U.S., the law is that pressurized gas tanks need to be inspected by licensed test facilities, and only they have the authority to condemn a tank. Dive shops have no such authority! It doesn't matter one iota if they have taken any private courses (like PSI) on scuba tank inspection, those are basically meaningless in terms of the law allowing them to disable or disfigure customers' tanks. What they can do is refuse to fill them or put their sticker on the tank. That's it. In fact, they can refuse to fill any tank, for any reason. They own the compressor. But they do not own your tank.

Find another shop and hope that the next one isn't even worse, hehe.

Can you cite the law(s) you are talking about and provide the exact text of the "law" supporting your claim above please?
 
If I do a VE on a pre-89 AL and get thread failure, I simply return the tank to the customer with “Thread Failure” written with a Trump Sharpie on blue tape. I also include a printed copy of the failure report. Customer can do whatever they like with the tank. I just won’t pass or fill it. If another store fills it, not my problem.
 
Can you site the law(s) you are talking about?
The applicable regulations are published by the Compressed Gas Association, for example Publication C-6. Those regulations have been incorporated into the Code of Federal Regulations 49CFR and 29CFR and have the weight of law. Unfortunately, the CGA publications must be purchased, and are expensive; all that is readily available is the Table of Contents, for example here for visual inspection of steel cylinders.
 
JUST ONE MORE REASON TO SIMPLY BYPASS THE SHOP AND GO DIRECTLY TO THE HYDRO FACILITY. THEY WILL VIS THE CYLINDER BEFORE TESTING AND IF THERE IS A PROBLEM THEY WILL NOT TEST THE TANK AND CALL YOU.

THAT IS WHY I HAVE MY OWN COMPRESSOR AND TUMBLER, DO MY OWN VALVE AND CYLINDER MAINTENANCE. I USE THE SHOP FOR HYDRO IN ACCORDANCE WITH DOT REGS. THE FIRE EXTINGUISHER SHOP ONLY STAMPED OUT ONE OF MY 1978 ALUMINUM CYLINDERS AFTER IT PASSED VIS AND FAILED THE TEST. I HAVE BEEN USING THEM FOR OVER 40 YEARS - THE VIS AND HYRO COSTS $28.00. FOR SCUBA AND $54.00 FOR THE LARGER BANK CYLINDERS, OXYGEN, C02 AND HELIUM. THERE ARE NO WAVERS TO SIGN. LDS HAS A CONFLICT OF INTEREST SINCE THEY MANDATE AN ANNUAL VIS NOT REQUIRED BY DOT- WHICH THEY GLEEFULLY PROVIDE AND SELL CYLINDERS, WHICH THEY ALSO PROVIDE. (OF COURSE I USE THE CO2 FOR WELDING ONLY, HELIUM AND OXYGEN FOR WELDING/CUTTING AND TRIMIX)


How is there as conflict that effects how the shop passes of fails your tank. I understand the conflict you are ttring ot refer to.. but the hydro process says in writing to condemn and render unable to fill. a shop also by statute can not modify your personal property. that alone stops the shop. their conflict can result in failing tanks but not render them unuseable. If one shop fails it then go to another shop for a second opinion. If they say it failed also then authorize its destruction as a vessel. A hydro shop can do the same thing as the shop can do also when it comes to conflict of interest. The bottom line is that a hydro is a federal process that involves documentable testing. a VIS is more opinion as to whether it is a pass or fail in many aspects. You always look for a way to pass a tank and not to fail a tank. If there is a question,,,,,, you pass it. Next year it will become a hard fail. DOT requires hydro every x years. DOT , for the post part. doesnt care about vis's. There is no law breaking involved if you use a out dated hydroed tank for personal use. comercial use is a different matter. There are a lot of hot buttons that get pushed when talking about hydro and vis in the non comercial world.
 
If I do a VE on a pre-89 AL and get thread failure, I simply return the tank to the customer with “Thread Failure” written with a Trump Sharpie on blue tape. I also include a printed copy of the failure report. Customer can do whatever they like with the tank.
My approach to this 'gray area' is the same. I feel properly covered by the CGA itself:

"Experience in the inspection of cylinders is an important factor in determining the acceptability of a given cylinder for continued service. Users lacking this experience who have questionable cylinders should return them to a manufacturer of the same type of cylinders or to a competent requalification agency for re-inspection."

CGA C-6 and CGA C-6.1 are the primary documents for steel and aluminum. The re-inspector is responsible for making sure he/she is always testing to the most current standard. The re-inspector is being paid to test to standards. Being overly cautious for your own personal peace of mind is not what the owner is paying for.

I am a newbie inspector. As such, I am overly careful about following the guidelines. I can Accept, Reject, or Condemn a cylinder. If the cylinder is clearly a hazard then I would condemn it and render it unfit for refilling. I was surprised at the amount of internal damage that a cylinder can have and still be serviceable by CGA standards.

There is a lot of 'judgment call' when it comes to cylinders that show internal damage. There are a lot of compromised scuba tanks in daily use and they aren't going off like popcorn on diver's backs. Statistics and my training tell me that the inspection standards are appropriate and should neither be relaxed nor strengthened.
 
I’m not sure why people told OP to clean the sharpie off. Doesn’t make any difference to the tank or future inspection.
 
The applicable regulations are published by the Compressed Gas Association, for example Publication C-6. Those regulations have been incorporated into the Code of Federal Regulations 49CFR and 29CFR and have the weight of law. Unfortunately, the CGA publications must be purchased, and are expensive; all that is readily available is the Table of Contents, for example here for visual inspection of steel cylinders.
I always get a kick out of this. The regulations have force of law, but you have to pay lots of money to know what that law is, so other people tell you what they think is in there.
 
@Ana ,

Your views on this? (I noticed your 'likes' on this thread) I could reference a post or two of yours, but mostly pointless. You know what you posted and you stand by it as do I for all of my posts. As one OF to another...

So, I have now removed the threat to my old steels that some wet behind the ears newbie VIP tester presents to my tried, seasoned, and trusted old girls. I alone do the O2 cleaning and VIP's. SDI sez so and sells me the stickers. Paid the bux, drove 1.2K miles to take the courses from someone who cares and I'm almost good. But there is still that hydro thing...

I have a good hydro re-certifier contact through my new LDS who knows that I know what I'm talking about.

We should all have to do this, no?
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/swift/

Back
Top Bottom