oversea
Guest
Btw, thanks to all for the info
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
I'm not really familiar with that method, but the attachment points are the same, so I imagine the results will be too. Just be sure you have it secured in a way that makes it possible to cut it free with a knife or shears if you absolutely have to.oversea:I was actually intending on using a neck ring W/ clip and clip/band clamp at the bottom of the pony and clip the whole assembly off of my bp, like the way oms shows their stage or argon rigging.
The DIR method is an adaptation of the Hog method. I don't want to start an argument, but personally I prefer the hog method as it does not use the fisherman's knot which is, in my opinion, a potential weakness. The lower bolt snap is not readily removeable with the Hog method, but then I have never had a reason to remove one. With the hog method there are two strands of line holding the boltsnap in place and one can fail with no ill effect.Soggy:As a general rule, I'd recommend ignoring anything on the OMS website...the way you have described means there are metal-to-metal connections, which means, should a clip fail, you have no way of detaching the bottle in an emergency. I would suggest rigging it this way...
http://www.dir-diver.com/en/equipment/stagebottle_rigging.html
There are no metal-to-metal connections here.
jagfish:They look like an intersting idea if you wanted to dive doubles at locations that only had single aluminums available.
kennethw:For me, travel with a set of bands and a manifold. Not much weight and quite compact, and will fit with the rest of your 'normal' single-gear. If where you go only has singles, it is simply a matter of taking the single tank valves off and screwing in the manifold and bands. Just takes a little time, but if you are more comfortable diving that way or you didn't expect in that remote (away from home) location you would be doing tech diving, it's worth the time.
jagfish:Pretty amiable of the dive sites you frequent to let you do that kind of surgery on thier tanks...no such luck here by a long shot.
I am surprised that some dive store owner would let you do that, presumably at a travel destination and also that you feel a manifold is worth that much trouble. I would think constantly removing and replacing a manifold can't be too good for it either.kennethw:For me, travel with a set of bands and a manifold. Not much weight and quite compact, and will fit with the rest of your 'normal' single-gear. If where you go only has singles, it is simply a matter of taking the single tank valves off and screwing in the manifold and bands. Just takes a little time, but if you are more comfortable diving that way or you didn't expect in that remote (away from home) location you would be doing tech diving, it's worth the time.
DA Aquamaster:The DIR method is an adaptation of the Hog method. I don't want to start an argument, but personally I prefer the hog method as it does not use the fisherman's knot which is, in my opinion, a potential weakness.