I've been reading reviews and researching SEA ELITE gear and have found nothing but positive reviews on their open circuit regulators. How ever Sea Elite was allegedly aware of the problems associated with the dump valve spring in their BCDs and didn't do anything about it until it was the suspect of an accident. Weather it's true or not I don't know, but it's enough to give me pause from buying one of their regulators.
Regulators need both service and parts and the only place you will be able to get that is from Divers Supply, so you are locked into them.
Very true. They also have a 2 to 3 week lead time including shipping time on reg service. Plus the limited/lack of parts availability pretty much keeps me in the same boat I'm in now. So, even though I very much like their regulator line I'm pretty sure I won't be going that route.
Also Divers Supply is at the mercy of their OEM that could change or discontinue the design at anytime making parts a problem.
Not really an issue, as all manufacturers do this on a regular basis. just a chance you take I guess. Which brings us back to my OP.
I would recommend their Sea Elite wetsuits in a heartbeat, their regs I would pass on.
Bang on with the Sea Elite wetsuits though. I will be buying one of their suit/shorty/skin packages.
Cave Adventurers was selling Dive Rite regs for $199 a month or two ago and I seen Subgear Caymans (Mk17/S555) for under $300, so there is no reason to purchase a house brand.
With the current allegations against Dive Rite... I wouln't touch em with a 10 foot pole.
---------- Post Merged at 08:27 PM ---------- Previous Post was at 08:17 PM ----------
I was such a loyal DACOR diver that I even had a special card issued by Dacor called the Dacor Frequent Diver.
It rewarded you points for every Dacor purchase you made.
Unfortunately the company went under before I got the chance to redeem my certificate....
I remember those! I had one myself. I didn't get to use mine either.
---------- Post Merged at 09:02 PM ---------- Previous Post was at 08:17 PM ----------
I am refering to the 1st stage high pressure diaphram, not the 2nd stage inhalation diaphram.
My mistake, I thought you were referring to the inhalation diaphragm as I did specify XLE, meaning second stage Pacer XLE diaphragm and not first stage 360 diaphragm.
The diaphram is crushed in place to ensure it stays in place and doesn't blow out, resulting in an ooa .
They cannot be re-used safely.
Definitely replace the first stage HP diaphragm. I don't disagree with you there.
But I don't see how a blow out would result in an air cut off. If you suffered a first stage diaphragm blow out wouldn't that cause a drop in intermediate pressure allowing the main spring to push the hp valve open resulting in a free flow through the blow out? In which case water still can't enter the IP chamber which would still allow you to continue breathing from the second stage long enough to make a safe emergency assent? Isn't this what the designers mean by "fail-safe"?
---------- Post Merged at 09:14 PM ---------- Previous Post was at 08:17 PM ----------
Reverse engineering an HP seat would be easy. Tooling up production to manufacture them would be VERY expensive
Dacor Regulator Parts - Northeast Scuba Supply
Nothing special there. Those HP seats could easily be turned on any standard CNC lathe with standard bits. No tooling up required just G-code for the CNC software. Trident apparently found it worth the effort.