The DGX valves are a step in the right direction but an order of magnitude different in effect. The AP diving valves go to full pressure over two minutes. Where the DGX is at least an improvement, is in the speed of opening. But the threads nonetheless pull the entire seat face away from the orifice, albeit a smaller distance per turn. The AP diving valve, on the other hand, is a needle valve. This obviously means that the pull away surface area is much smaller early on in valve opening.
I'm working with Silent Diving to perhaps become a dealer for these valves. Perhaps we can work a deal for ScubaBoard members if this comes to fruition.
Please forgive in advance my ignorance on this.
Are you saying that the AP needle valve restricts flow even when fully open? That is counter to my understanding and also seems to be counter to the video that was shown of the AP valve demo.
From the thread you posted earlier:
They have an O2 needle valve feeding one regular hose and one hose with a flow limiter. The regular hose gets to full pressure in roughly 13 seconds and the one with the flow limiter is not far behind.
But, my real question is not directly about that. It is, does the needle valve restrict flow when all the way open?
If it does not, and it takes a "normal" number of turns to open it all the way, then a person who opens it quickly gets no benefit from the needle valve, right?
OTOH, if you open a DGX valve quickly, well, it still opens slowly because of the threading.
And if the AP valve does ultimately restrict the flow, even when open all the way, is that a safety hazard? Maybe not. I don't feel knowledgeable enough to say for sure.
What it seems like - to my novice point of view - is that the needle valve is helpful if you remember to open it slowly. But, if you don't, it makes no difference. On the other hand, the DGX valve seems like it would help whether you open it slowly or quickly. And, what would be ideal, is a combo of the two. A needle valve AND finer threads to make it take more turns to open.