211ratsbud
Contributor
Where did you buy the nautec? I do like the way those look and fitThere are good alternatives to Lolas or even flexible hoses.
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Where did you buy the nautec? I do like the way those look and fitThere are good alternatives to Lolas or even flexible hoses.
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Does this show that the flexible HP manifold hose cannot be removed without tools?There are good alternatives to Lolas or even flexible hoses.
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Reaching the valves is part of the pre-dive sequence, so you should "train" it with every dive ;-)
Yes, it is harder than with a "normal" double, but it is doable.
I run a charter op. I've never seen this be an issue and if you ask the guys diving in the Atlantic off of Jersey I'm 100% certain it's not an issue either. Most guys either have enough dilout for a few dives or have a whip bottle.Does this show that the flexible HP manifold hose cannot be removed without tools?
It does raise the question of how the Diluent/Bailout cylinders are changed when there's a soft manifold. It looks a complex job where the new cylinders need to be handled very gently, not something to do on a rolling boat. Any water droplets in that HP hose or the valves would be quickly pushed into the cylinders; needs a good blow through.
Compare with a normal CCR configuration which uses a single 3 litre diluent cylinder that is very easily swapped over in seconds. Any water on the valve simply cannot enter the cylinder; it gets pushed into the first stage. Similarly changing bailout is a matter of choosing the correct cylinders for the dive profile (which is the same as when using backmounted dil/out as that gas cannot be used for the whole bailout except for a trivial shallow dive).
Altough i am from Germany, i bought these in the UK. I don't know where to get them atm. Nautec didn't answer my mail at all ;-)Where did you buy the nautec? I do like the way those look and fit.
Looks like it is now possible to buy it directly at Nautec:Altough i am from Germany, i bought these in the UK. I don't know where to get them atm. Nautec didn't answer my mail at all ;-)
Turns out you need to be able to reach your valves in any configuration.Yes... of course not everyone diving one of those rigs can actually reach the valves, which are harder to get to than the valves on a manifolded twinset. As GUE diver said to me "You only have to reach them during the course".
Does anyone know how long you've got before you lose all your gas if a LOLA manifold ruptures? I know that with a normal HP hose you've got ages but obviously the manifold has a much larger bore. Has anyone tested it?
If someone can’t reach their Lola valves they should not be diving that unit then. Only touching the valves in class is bs. It should be part of every predive plan as well as done anytime there could have been contact with the valves. Although gue divers believe in team diving, team diving doesn’t mean I don’t have to be able to touch my valves cause I have a buddy to do it. If you can’t shut down valves in any configuration, you’re a liability to your teammate. I will say that closing the oxygen valve with the gue JJ style setup can be challenging. Lola valves no. That means your setup isn’t properly set up for you. Many things to fix that such as moving tanks up or down or harness adjustments.Yes... of course not everyone diving one of those rigs can actually reach the valves, which are harder to get to than the valves on a manifolded twinset. As GUE diver said to me "You only have to reach them during the course".
Does anyone know how long you've got before you lose all your gas if a LOLA manifold ruptures? I know that with a normal HP hose you've got ages but obviously the manifold has a much larger bore. Has anyone tested it?
Don't you dive with the manifold closed and only opened if you need to access the gas on "the other side"?If someone can’t reach their Lola valves they should not be diving that unit then. Only touching the valves in class is bs. It should be part of every predive plan as well as done anytime there could have been contact with the valves. Although gue divers believe in team diving, team diving doesn’t mean I don’t have to be able to touch my valves cause I have a buddy to do it. If you can’t shut down valves in any configuration, you’re a liability to your teammate. I will say that closing the oxygen valve with the gue JJ style setup can be challenging. Lola valves no. That means your setup isn’t properly set up for you. Many things to fix that such as moving tanks up or down or harness adjustments.
Who the f does that? I definitely do not. Its just like doubles. Isolator(s) and valves open just like doubles. Only time the isolator and valves all remain shut is when the unit isn't being dove to avoid helium leakage from the lola crossover (which is a nonissue if you keep them closed).Don't you dive with the manifold closed and only opened if you need to access the gas on "the other side"?