tmassey
Contributor
there's a vast difference between a steel cylinder with a 46 year old fill, and an aluminum cylinder with a 3 year old fill.
From @tursiops perspective, there is absolutely *no* difference. And the misunderstanding between the two of you highlights a very big hole in many divers’ training and perspective, often through no fault of their own.
For open water divers, no real mention of the contents of their tanks is ever really made. It’s air. It’s always assumed to be air. In fact, they are given no instructions or procedure for verifying that. Again, it’s always assumed to be air.
Unfortunately, scuba tanks can be filled with all kinds of things. No doubt air is the most common, but far from the only thing. And some of those things that tanks can be filled with are deadly. Advanced and especially technical divers tend to use those gases. And so such divers are given simple, specific instruction: always personally check every tank you are going to breathe, and do so shortly before you use it. In fact, failing to check the contents of a tank is the leading cause of death for technical divers!
So, @tursiops’ terse (see what I did there?) point, stated in his typically crusty manner, is that it should be standard procedure for every diver to check every tank before they dive it, especially a tank that has been sitting there for any length of time, whether three years or 43 years. As a technical diver, I completely agree. However, I also realize that not all divers have been trained to follow that procedure, as risky as that might be for any diver of any skill level.
Which is why I’m taking the time to write this little missive. Hopefully it might bridge the gap. For a diver who has not been instructed on the importance of checking tanks, diving with a three-year-old tank without checking might be standard procedure. For a diver who has been instructed to check, three *days* could be too long. Even if they filled it themselves. Even if it hasn’t moved an inch from where they left it when they filled it. It’s procedure. And it’s designed to save lives.
Now, why it’s not standard procedure for open water divers is a little bit beyond me. I fill tanks for friends of mine. Most use nitrox, but some still use only air. And yet I make even them analyze every tank — for oxygen *and* carbon monoxide. Why? Because *I* might have made a mistake. Just because *they* wanted air doesn’t prevent me from putting something unknown in it. So, we check. Every time.
Not telling anyone else what they need to do for their own diving. As @The Chairman says, dive and let dive. But I wanted to possibly give a different perspective for others to consider.