pants!:
Has anyone actually analyzed a partial-pressure blended tank immediately after filling and then again a little while later to see if maybe this does actually make a difference?
Yes. Repeatedly.
I know it isn't supposed to matter but the plain simple fact of the matter is that it does. It doesn't seem to make much difference with recreational nitrox mixes but mixes with lots of oxygen or helium in them will definitely test more accurately if you give the tanks a spin.
I read the books and would have said it was hooey until I started mixing regularly. When I doubted, I was handed an analyzer and told to take a reading, then the tanks were spun and I took another reading. I don't remember what the difference was that day but, from experience, I can tell you that the discrepancy before and after a spin can easily be 2% to 5% on the O2, more on the He. From that point on, I have finished each technical mix that isn't going to sit at the fill station overnight by laying the tank(s) down on a lazy Susan and spinning them for two or three minutes before I analyze. It saves time, aggravation and money and provides a more accurate reading. It also makes me a few dollars every now and then when I convince the occasional whelp who is giving me flack about spinning tanks to put some money where his mouth is. I haven't been able to get anybody to go double or nothing on a deep trimix fill, yet, but I'm forever hopeful.
Anyone who mixes technical gases regularly knows that the reading you get right after a fill can be significantly different than the reading you get 24 hours later. Some may attribute this to a "mixing" effect, others to a "cooling" effect, but in the end
it doesn't really matter why - what matters is you get a more reliable, more accurate reading if you take a couple of minutes to spin those bottles. Personally, I think it's probably a combination of both factors, but I can tell you that dropping the tanks in the pool for a few minutes doesn't have as much effect as a spin.
I know that there are those who disagree but the proof, as they say, lies in the pudding. For those of you with questions about the contradictory opinions you're seeing here, consider the sources carefully: all cyber-divers were not made equal. Like Mike and some of the others, I actually blend gases, including hypoxic trimix and technical nitrox and I do a
lot of it. Heck, I even took the classes (TDI Advanced Gas Blender #117127) though I learned more by doing than reading about it. It seems that most of those who don't believe lack one critical component to having an opinion - they don't actually have much (if any) experience at a fill station.
Just sign me,
:mfight: