DIN cylinders available?

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Most places in Cozumel use convertible tanks now. Not sure about the ocean-oriented shops on the mainland, but all the cave/cenote oriented shops use convertible tanks or 300bar DIN.

Converting the MK11 between DIN and yoke requires a special yoke socket which may be hard to find; you'd have to buy it and carry it with you. The older SP yokes had enough clearance so that you could use a big adjustable wrench (or even vise jaws) to grab the retainer and loosen it, and the DIN fittings use a hex key; best to get a hex bit for a socket wrench. But some of the newer yokes (which I'm not that familiar with TBH, most of my regs are old) have more of a slope in the shoulders of the yoke itself, meaning you can't get a grip on the retainer with a wrench. It's another in a long line of SP designs that force you to use their tool.

Anyhow, the safest thing to do for this particular trip is to bring a yoke reg; that way you absolutely know that you can use it everywhere. But it's pretty low risk to bring DIN and hope for finding DIN compatible tanks. I agree using the adapter sucks, but it will work in a pinch. How uncomfortable it is with banging into your head depends on how high you position the tank on your back, and how close to your back. For a typical jacket style BC, usually the tank is fairly low and far away from your neck. With a BP/W, no STA, it's probably going to be a pain in the neck, literally.

I wouldn't want to count on converting from DIN to yoke (or vice-versa) on the trip unless you are also bringing the special yoke socket, the hex key bit, and a socket wrench, preferably a torque wrench. And something to hold the reg steady while you do this. There is a torque spec for that fitting (used to be around 21 ft/lbs) it's not absolutely critical, but it is pretty tight and you don't want to over-torque it.

Probably more information than you wanted, but I'd say if you want a DIN reg for home use, just buy it, buy or borrow a spin-on adapter, and hope for DIN tanks.

Oh yeah, one extra thing; I've seen this on boats in Cozumel. Some shops that have the convertible tanks just leave the plugs installed, and they can be a bear to remove, especially on a rocking boat with rusty worn out hex keys. I'd bring a good quality, fairly new, good sized to apply more force, 6mm (I think) hex key. That way you can deal with getting a sticky plug out of a tank if it's necessary. If I'm wrong about the size, I'm sure some helpful soul will chime in.
 
Thanks all! I am leaning toward the DIN + converter approach (currently looking at SP MK11 + C370). Is the MK11 an easily convertible first stage?

And yeah the reason why I hesitate getting the DIN + adapter is because of what people said about head bumping, but I've never used one so don't actually know if it's a problem with me / my setup.


Yeah I was planning on buying a few inserts.
Apeks.
My approach to the topic: DIN + converter. I still have an adaptor but have not used it for very long time.
I always ask ahead for the fitting. But if you do not know which operator to ask/use!
Insert is getting common but restricted to newish tank.
In SE Asia A-clamp(yoke) rules unless the shop use convertible tanks.
 
DIN is a better setup. I’ve travelled the world diving and about 85 percent of the time, getting DIN tanks isn’t an issue. Most Yoke tanks convert to DIN these days. For the 15 percent of the time when it is, the adapter works fine and I’ve never had a problem with bumping my head on it. Never regretted the decision to use DIN from the start.
 
Hmm looks like there is a Yoke to DIN conversion kit for ScubaPro, but not a DIN to Yoke kit. I guess that means if my plan is to convert, I will have to get the Yoke version and buy the kit.
That's correct. Mounting the cheap Universal SP DIN conversion kit is quite easy. But I second the recommendation to buy instead directly the DIN version and an adapter (which costs half the SP conversion kit and requires no tools).
 
DIN is a better setup. I’ve travelled the world diving and about 85 percent of the time, getting DIN tanks isn’t an issue. Most Yoke tanks convert to DIN these days. For the 15 percent of the time when it is, the adapter works fine and I’ve never had a problem with bumping my head on it. Never regretted the decision to use DIN from the start.

Agree, all my regs are DIN and I have travelled to a lot of places around the world and never had an issue getting a DIN tank even in super remote areas of the world. So much so that I stopped travelling with an adapter years ago.
 
I can see where a DIN is a better connection, but can anyone tell me of a yoke connection that failed at depth? Just curios.

Edit.... At recreational depth.
 
I can see where a DIN is a better connection, but can anyone tell me of a yoke connection that failed at depth? Just curios.

Edit.... At recreational depth.
A few years ago on holiday in Bali my buddies yoke O ring failed 30 minutes into a dive. A slow ascent on my secondary brought us safely to the surface.
 
A few years ago on holiday in Bali my buddies yoke O ring failed 30 minutes into a dive. A slow ascent on my secondary brought us safely to the surface.

On of the best features of owing DIN regs is you control the O-ring's. I'm sure some don't d it but in general how often do you see Yoke divers just grab a tank, throw there reg on it, go through a quick START/Buddy check and off they go. Never once inspecting the dive centers crustified o-ring or they just take a quick glance at it.

Think about all the classic pictures you see of the swarm of divers at a popular dive site with yoke shop o-ring bubble trails on every other diver.

Lastly don't forget alot of dive centers use valves with inserts. Think about how old and when was the last time that insert o-ring was replaced when your clamping on your yoke reg
 

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