kurisuji
Registered
Good Afternoon All,
First post on ScubaBoard ... yay! I'm in the process of tec training, and have a handful of questions regarding Best Practices for O2 Reg & Deco Bottle care. Of course, this is something I'll learn more about in my courses and will discuss with my instructor, but I've also been doing a bunch of research to understand this nebulous topic as best I can (including reading many ScubaBoard threads) -- just curious to get the opinions of you experienced folks on this board as data points. Especially interested in the opinions of any trained O2 equipment service techs.
Please forgive my super detailed questions, but I've gotten paranoid reading all about O2 and I'm also an engineer, so I can't help it
(1) 100% O2 Deco Bottle Tank Valve.
First post on ScubaBoard ... yay! I'm in the process of tec training, and have a handful of questions regarding Best Practices for O2 Reg & Deco Bottle care. Of course, this is something I'll learn more about in my courses and will discuss with my instructor, but I've also been doing a bunch of research to understand this nebulous topic as best I can (including reading many ScubaBoard threads) -- just curious to get the opinions of you experienced folks on this board as data points. Especially interested in the opinions of any trained O2 equipment service techs.
Please forgive my super detailed questions, but I've gotten paranoid reading all about O2 and I'm also an engineer, so I can't help it

(1) 100% O2 Deco Bottle Tank Valve.
- Assuming a slow flow rate, is it safe to use a DIN pressure gauge to check tank pressure? Seems this could introduce contamination if the same gauge is used on other tanks. Dedicated gauge for O2 tank? Or perhaps just check pressure via SPG once reg is attached?
- Similar to above, safe to use standard O2 analyzer that's been used on other (e.g. nitrox premix) tanks? Since it's not being screwed in, there's less opportunity to contaminate the tank valve. On the other hand, an analyzer used with Nitrox is sitting around and exposed to dust and the like.
- Probably makes sense to cap the valve when not in use to prevent contamination. Maybe a stupid question, but I'd assume DIN valve screw-in caps wouldn't contain any material that's a no-no for O2? These valve caps (inserts) have also been sitting around in a non-pristine environment, so does using them present a contamination risk to the valve?
- Aside from meticulously following the usual practices [rinsing/keeping inlet covered/etc], are there any post-dive best practices beyond caring for a standard regulator? I assume bagging the reg after it's dry?
- Assuming you'll inevitably get a splash/drip of salt water on the DIN connector/threads and/or the O2 tank valve, is it safe to wipe off with fresh water and wipe with lint free cloth? Or is that introducing additional contamination?
- Seems to be conflicting opinions (shocker, I know) on how "O2 clean" the LP side of the regulator needs to be. LP hose exposed to environment (not capped) but also brand new (O2-safe materials) and not used ... need O2 cleaning before use? SPG (HP) exposed to the environment (not capped) but also new (O2-safe materials) and not used ... connector need any kind of cleaning?