Fill slow and you don't need a wetfill setup.
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I like that....My fill set up. Constant water flow enter at the bottom at water hose connection and overflows at the top. Impossible for valve or whip to be submerged.
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If I saw a shop wet filling, I would go to another dive shop.
Let me know when you've been a dive industry professional for 20 years, had 6000 dives, and numerous cylinders need expensive maintenance due to mishandling. I think you should wet fill too.I believe wet filling is the way to go.
I don't think anybody fills much slower than I do (over 3 hours). I still get a fair amount of pressure drop after they cool. I have my compressor shut down at 3800 LB and the tanks drop to 35-3600. I generally don't wet fill but when I do it makes a difference.Fill slow and you don't need a wetfill setup.
That would be really really slow. I take 30 or 40 minutes to fill an hp 100. That still builds enough heat in the steel to lose around 300 psi after the tanks cool, which I later top off. Way easier to me than a tank bath but I have the convenience of 4 whips and a cascade.Fill slow and you don't need a wetfill setup.
My LDS has been filling tanks in water for over 65 years. I first filled a tank there in the 80s. I have yet to have any issues with my tanks from any fills there.Let me know when you've been a dive industry professional for 20 years, had 6000 dives, and numerous cylinders need expensive maintenance due to mishandling. I think you should wet fill too.
Mishandling is the key word here.Let me know when you've been a dive industry professional for 20 years, had 6000 dives, and numerous cylinders need expensive maintenance due to mishandling. I think you should wet fill too.