Not saying it doesn't exist, but I have never seen a scuba tank with a 5800 hydro pressure.hydros for most scuba tanks is 5/3 working pressure so for most aluminum tanks that’s 5000psi. LP Steels get 4000psi and HP steels ~5800psi depending on pressure.
A few hundred here or there then using the tank is more often than not. It’s the cave fills that sit for months at a time in a cave that will most often fail hydro.
And cave divers doing “hydro fills” on their tanks in which the stamped pressure on the tank is their turn pressure is highly unsafe. Ever notice how a lot of cave divers always have new tanks?![]()
All of the high pressure steel tanks I have seen have a hydro test pressure of 5250. 5/3 is the test pressure for 3a series.
Exemption tanks have a preset test pressure as part of their special permit.
I have never seen tanks fail from sitting long periods of time with cave fills in them.
No, I haven't noticed cave divers with new tanks, unless they are new cave divers. What I have noticed is the hundreds of sets of rental tanks in cave country from the 70s, 80s and 90s that have been sitting at 3600 for 20+ years and still passing hydro every 5.
Unless you have some evidence to the contrary, which you don't, maybe stop passing regurgitated information?
The elastic limit on a 3aa2400 tanks usually falls between 4200 and 4800. Filling it to 3600 is not damaging the steel, it may be ill advised and even illegal, but it isn't going to harm the tank. It is getting closer to that line than one may deem a good idea, but it isn't actually hurting the tank.