Using Your Steel Tank on a SoCal Dive Boat, Any risk of rust?

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napDiver,

Sounds to me like a deep wall dive, that you should not be diving without redundancy, and certainly not single 72's

If it was me, I'd take your two tanks pre-filled, and a dive shop rental tank pre-filled, for a total of three tanks.

If a third tank is not allowed due to space limitations, then I'd take two dive shop prefilled rental tanks, and have one refilled on the boat.

Personally, I'd be leery of single outing boat fills. All my tanks are cleaned for oxygen service, and I would not want them filled by anyone/anywhere that I was not completely familiar with.

With the little you've told us, I'm not liking this scenario.

Rose.
Deep wall dive?
Where do they have that in SoCal?
Maybe Farnsworth but that’s not an edge into the abyss, more like a cascading typography.
 
OP already said it's an oil rigs dive.

My tank is still pretty new, but I've had my first visual inspection since having the Pacific Star and countless other boats fill it, and there were no problems. I also haven't heard of anyone having those issues. Don't bring 2 tanks unless you're sure they are running a sufficiently limited load that there will be space for them. And don't dive the rigs with an LP-72. An HP-100 gives me more air than NDL for those deep dives on the rigs, even with the weaksauce boat fills; if your SAC rate is considerably higher than .5 cf/m, consider bringing the 120 instead. Have fun!
 
@lexvil My first time to the oil rigs! I'm going to stick with my original plans. TY ur posts were exactly the info I needed.

@Rose Robinson thanks for the concern. I'll be bringing the HP120 and HP100. We will be fine. No down currents and there is the oil rig structure.
 
Are they letting people bag up on scallops at the rigs these days?
Man, I never saw so many in one place, monsters too!
Yep. Easy pickings.

For anyone interested, you need a fishing license with ocean enhancement (an extra $5 I think), a bag, and a knife. The best knife is a butter knife with some grippy tape around the handle and a wrist lanyard; Pacific Wilderness in San Pedro sells them pre-assembled for $15, or you can make your own. The knife doesn't have to be sharp, and it's safer if it isn't; you do want it thick enough to pry open the shells without bending, and you want it cheap enough that you're not going to chase after it like an idiot if you drop it. You want to remove the scallops from their shells underwater; the shells are heavy and carrying that much extra weight on a bottomless deep dive is dangerous. Ask someone to show you how to do it. I wouldn't recommend going after scallops your first time on the rigs unless you're already experienced with task-loading at those depths. (You'll sometimes find a few scallops as shallow as 60 feet, but the big ones are down around 90 feet and below.) Daily limit is 10 scallops; if you accidentally cut one in half, Fish and Game will count it as two.
 
Buttons the size of hockey pucks!
I thought the next cross bar after 60’ was 120’?
60’ intervals between the cross bars?
I use a big pig sticker BFK for scallops.
I thought of making a small teak wedge that you could sneak up on a breathing scallop and stick the wedge into the “smile” and let it clamp down on it. Then you can take your time and carefully cut loose the flat side and do a nice clean job removing the button.
You need to have your buoyancy skills nailed down and pretty much second nature diving on the rigs!
 
YES we were going to catch scallops for the first time too! My gf has a flat tip titanium knife but I'll probably go to PW to pick up the knife your talking about. My bouyancy is good, task load no problems. My gf, well we will find out. I'm probably going to have to hold onto her catch bag until we get hit the surface.

This was a very helpful thread! Happy diving yall
 
Your cylinder requirements are based on gas consumption and depth. Assuming you know your RMV, it is easy to calculate the gas requirements for any dive. I have an average RMV of 0.36 cu ft/min. I can do essentially any no deco dive on an AL 80, except for shallow dives on high O2.
 

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