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Is a sealed Tupperware box OK? Once the CO2's been scrubbed from the surrounding space in the tub, that's it?
I would imagine so, though you don't want the scrubber rolling around
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Is a sealed Tupperware box OK? Once the CO2's been scrubbed from the surrounding space in the tub, that's it?
Is a sealed Tupperware box OK? Once the CO2's been scrubbed from the surrounding space in the tub, that's it?
Results
We completed five trials in each of the 28-day-sealed and overnight-open conditions, and four experiments in the 28-day-open condition. Unfortunately, we exhausted our same-batch supply of Sofnolime 797 with one trial in the 28-day-open condition remaining to be done. We attempted to run the trial with Sofnolime from another batch and obtained an aberrant result. Given the confluence of the results obtained in the trials performed using Sofnolime from the common batch (see below) we considered it reasonable to stop the study one trial short in the 28-day-open condition, rather than repeat the entire study with a new batch of Sofnolime.
The elapsed times to reach the failure end-point in each scrubber trial arranged by storage condition, and the mean times to failure for each condition are shown in Table 1. The breakthrough curves for each scrubber trial are shown in (Figure 2). There was a substantial (> 50 min) difference in mean duration to failure between scrubbers stored for 28 days in the sealed condition (longer) compared to the open condition (shorter; P = 0.003). Scrubbers stored 'open' for the much shorter overnight period showed no difference in mean duration to failure when compared to the canisters sealed for 28 days.
I am new to rebreathers and I am trying to figure out which features to have so that I can shortlist models that would be suited for me. From my research, I landed on 3 features that not all units have that would make diving easier and safer
Anybody would agree with these 3 being important features? Which models would fit the bill?
- ADV – Auto Diluent Valve (with or without a Flowstop isolator) — to automatically inflate counterlung when going deeper
- Scrubber Life Monitor — the scrubber is the bottleneck for dive duration and hence great to monitor it
- CO2 Sensor — Important for safety
Firstly what type of diving are you looking to use this for??
Overhead/cave
Deep trimix exploration dives
Recreationally
Do you want electronic or manual
Something travel friendly
What is your location and availability of support and instructors
How long have you been diving your unit?
Is it your first rebreather or did you have others?
How do you like your unit overall?
What do you really like about it?
What do you dislike?
What would you change?
Would you buy it again?
If money were no object what unit would you buy?
Why that one?
I would absolutely not get a sidemount CCR - they are a specialized tool with a whole bunch of compromises. A backmounted JJ, Meg, fathom, revo, or defender would be a better choiceBut if you insist on a sidemount unit, there are no stock hCCR sidemount units. Only a couple eCCR SM units which you would have to modify it in the future after training to be hCCR.
The SF2 and the liberty. Both are at least available in the USA, but neither have scrubber duration or CO2 sensors. There are probably ways to add an orifice but I've never heard of anyone who has. For every hCCR aficionado on the internet, there are at least as many divers who consider them to have all the flaws of both approaches and none of the value of either.
I would absolutely not get a sidemount CCR - they are a specialized tool with a whole bunch of compromises. A backmounted JJ, Meg, fathom, revo, or defender would be a better choiceBut if you insist on a sidemount unit, there are no stock hCCR sidemount units. Only a couple eCCR SM units which you would have to modify it in the future after training to be hCCR.
The SF2 and the liberty. Both are at least available in the USA, but neither have scrubber duration or CO2 sensors. There are probably ways to add an orifice but I've never heard of anyone who has. For every hCCR aficionado on the internet, there are at least as many divers who consider them to have all the flaws of both approaches and none of the value of either.
I would absolutely not get a sidemount CCR - they are a specialized tool with a whole bunch of compromises.