Enraptured of the Deep
Contributor
I will be grateful for advice on my plans regarding first stages. I am joining the regulator self-service club. To keep the maintenance easy, I am switching over from Scubapro Mk25s to semi-vintage Mk5 and Mk10 first stages. I have two Mk5s, one with a thin all-metal yoke and one with a thick all-metal yoke, and I am about to receive a Mk10 with a thick all-metal yoke.
I have been diving sidemount doubles for the past half-dozen years but am switching over to a backmounted single-tank DIR rig. Why? The dive op I am diving with these days does shore dives almost exclusively, often with longish walks, and I end up being the only sidemount diver. Backmounting will put me into the same setup rhythm as the rest of the crowd and especially my perma-buddy (wife).
I prefer DIN connections for all the usual reasons (not trying to start a flame-war, just expressing my preference -- I also prefer he/his). I would also like to end up with a pair of first stages that are approximately the same for sidemounting, for those times when the spirit moves me. All tanks at my usual dive op are aluminum 80 or 72 cu. ft. (12L or 10L) cylinders with convertible pro valves, filled to 200 bar (2900 psi). That means the thin yoked Mk5 won't work as is, since it is rated to only 2250 psi (155 bar).
I am planning to buy one Scubapro universal DIN conversion kit, which I understand will work with the Mk10 without any special installation arrangements. That would free up a thick yoke, which I would move over to the Mk5 that currently has a thin yoke.
These moves will result in a Mk10 DIN for backmounting and a pair of Mk5 yokes for occasional sidemounting. All three first stages would be ready for 200 bar tanks. In fact, I would plan to bring at least one of the Mk5s with me as a backup, in case the Mk10 ever has a problem. (At some point in the future, I may consider switching the Mk5s over to DINs, recognizing that this would require adding non-OEM stainless steel washers as spacers, per an old Scubaboard thread.)
Does that all make sense? Am I missing anything with this plan?

I have been diving sidemount doubles for the past half-dozen years but am switching over to a backmounted single-tank DIR rig. Why? The dive op I am diving with these days does shore dives almost exclusively, often with longish walks, and I end up being the only sidemount diver. Backmounting will put me into the same setup rhythm as the rest of the crowd and especially my perma-buddy (wife).
I prefer DIN connections for all the usual reasons (not trying to start a flame-war, just expressing my preference -- I also prefer he/his). I would also like to end up with a pair of first stages that are approximately the same for sidemounting, for those times when the spirit moves me. All tanks at my usual dive op are aluminum 80 or 72 cu. ft. (12L or 10L) cylinders with convertible pro valves, filled to 200 bar (2900 psi). That means the thin yoked Mk5 won't work as is, since it is rated to only 2250 psi (155 bar).
I am planning to buy one Scubapro universal DIN conversion kit, which I understand will work with the Mk10 without any special installation arrangements. That would free up a thick yoke, which I would move over to the Mk5 that currently has a thin yoke.
These moves will result in a Mk10 DIN for backmounting and a pair of Mk5 yokes for occasional sidemounting. All three first stages would be ready for 200 bar tanks. In fact, I would plan to bring at least one of the Mk5s with me as a backup, in case the Mk10 ever has a problem. (At some point in the future, I may consider switching the Mk5s over to DINs, recognizing that this would require adding non-OEM stainless steel washers as spacers, per an old Scubaboard thread.)
Does that all make sense? Am I missing anything with this plan?
