Don Burke
Contributor
This is probably the most enjoyable discussion I have had on Scubaboard.quimby:(addressing jhelmuth) Now we get into displacement vs bouyancy. While I understand your point, it is meaningless to me without the tank weight etc. Again it boils (no pun intended) down to + or - bouyancy empty at 10ft. and weight of air, which is one of the changes during the dive and the other being suit compression or change. Ditchable weight vs fixed weight and can you exit with reasonable safety.
I also think this is a discussion maybe slightly derailed from the original topic, but I dont believe anyone is trying to or has been offended.
Addressing other points:
The volume of a given tank doesn't change appreciably with a change in internal pressure, so it displaces pretty much the same amount of water empty or full. The only way to change the buoyancy of the tank is to change the weight by adding or removing gas.
If we are talking about changing the tank, we've changed the displacement and we get to start over.
Making 104 standard cubic feet of air weigh 3.17 pounds, when the air weighs .075 pounds per standard cubic foot would indeed require an addendum to the laws of physics, specifically conservation of mass. All three of those numbers can't be correct. I can personally verify the .075, so one or both of the other numbers has to be off. My money is on the 3.17 being in error.
You'll find that the weight of a given amount of air will depend on the number of molecules you've managed to put in the alloted space. The temperature will affect how easy it is to get the air in that space, but not how much that number of molecules weigh. If you hot fill a tank to 3000psig, you can expect the pressure to drop as the tank cools. The weight won't change. If, after it cools, you top the tank up to 3000psig, it will indeed be heavier than it was because you've stuffed more molecules in the space. If you then heat the tank to the temperature of the hot fill, the pressure will go up, but the weight won't change from the top off weight.
Humidity will indeed affect the weight of air. Standard conditions will fix that, but what dive compressor operates in a standard temperature and pressure? In any case, the air we are talking about is pretty dry stuff and I'm not so sure we could even detect the difference between one shop's air and another shop's air by weight.
What started all of this was the boilerplate statement that steel tanks are never safe for wetsuits and aluminum tanks are the only safe backgas tanks for wetsuits. While we've beaten the area around this bush pretty severely, I think we are all in agreement that the statement is only true part (perhaps most in the case of doubles) of the time.
I've looked over the posts I've made in this thread and haven't seen what my error is supposed to be. I suspect something I posted has been misread.
As I said above, I'm enjoying the heck out of this thread and certainly have no objection to continuing. I consider it time well spent.
Don Burke