fisherdvm
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"pressure gradient is 10 times greater" than what?
LOL! Now you are just making stuff up to avoid saying you were wrong.
Please check my math above.
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"pressure gradient is 10 times greater" than what?
LOL! Now you are just making stuff up to avoid saying you were wrong.
As a minor point: you should be using 34 instead of 33, unless you are rinsing your reg in salt water.(atm+ ft water1/33) - (atm+ftwater2/33) = ft water1/33 - ftwater2/33
compared to surface... at depth 1, there is a differential of (2 inches/12 inches per feet)
compared to surface ... at depth 2, there is a differential of (24 inches/12 inches per feet)
Ratio of the differential (24 inches/ 12 inches per feet) divided by (2 inches/12 inches per feet).
All the inches and inches per feet cancel out
You get 12 times the pressure differential !
I stand by my numbers. You are speaking of absolute pressure exerted on each cells in the body.
I am speaking of the pressure differential between the inside of the regulator (1 atm), and the water outside the regulator, submerged at 2 inches vs 24 inches.
The differential is what drives the fluid, from area of high pressure to area of low pressure.
If the pressure inside the reg is 1 atm, then the shallow pressure outside the reg is 1 atm plus 2 inches/12 inches per foot/34 feet per atm, or 1.005 atm. The deeper pressure outside the reg is 1+24/12/34=1.06 atm. So the deeper pressure gradient to the inside of the reg is 1.06/1.005=5.5% greater.I am speaking of the pressure differential between the inside of the regulator (1 atm), and the water outside the regulator, submerged at 2 inches vs 24 inches.
I'm with most... just dry our caps w/a towel after last dive. My daughter's is an Aqualung so less worried about that one. Mine is Deep6.
Hers has the valve that closes when not under pressure, mine does not. So if I missed some moisture I'd be less concerned w/hers (as far as it entering the innards). (note, I did not say "I was concerned" either way). I always dry good.Why be more concerned?
I'm with most... just dry our caps w/a towel after last dive. My daughter's is an Aqualung so less worried about that one. Mine is Deep6. Once home, I attach them to my large air compressor (w/air dryer) and blow them out (2nd Stages) and soak them in a tub (w/air pressure on). I just use a Scuba Port Converter Block (pictured below - front/back) to attach the 1st stage to it and attach to my air compressor. Easier than attaching to an AL80 tank to soak the whole tank w/1st. I don't have a pony... that might be easier. The Air Compressor approach seems to work good.
View attachment 478552
View attachment 478553
The compressor is a large upright (utility) on wheels. I've got an air dyer filter inline but have not been concerned at this point with anything clogging the 1st etc. Maybe I should?!? I've used the air compressor to paint in the past and have never noticed any oily residue contaminating what I'm spraying.Interesting idea...is that a utility air compressor or the kind used for filling tanks? If it is the utility kind, are there any concerns with pollutants clogging up the sintered filter in the 1st stage? or oily residue mixing with the air passing into the 1st stage?
-Z