Dear SP,
- Is the New Scubapro C350 Second Stage a balanced SS?
- Does it correspond to the Subgear's SG50 or the SG30 second stage?
- How does it compare in performance to the S360 and the S560 second stages?
Balanced second stages have always been paired with higher end balanced first stages and that's something of a waste. Provided the IP is stable, which it is on a balanced first stage, there is no need to pneumatically balance the second stage. For example, way back in the day when I started diving, the unbalanced Mk 3 first stage was sold with the unbalanced R080 "High Performance" second stage, while the balanced Mk 5 and Mk 10 first stages were sold with both the unbalanced R109 "Adjustable" and the balanced R156 "Balanced Adjustable" second stages which were exactly the same except for the unbalanced versus balanced poppet assemblies installed in them.
With the Mk 3/High Performance you could clearly feel the increase in breathing effort as the tank pressure (and with it the IP of the first stage) fell. However, with an Adjustable and a Balanced Adjustable tuned to a balanced first stage like the Mk 5 or Mk 10, you couldn't feel any difference at all in the breathing effort. The only real advantage the Balanced Adjustable had was longer seat life as it used a lighter spring, and was less likely to damage the seat in storage over time, if you stored it without the little blue key installed. There was arguably some improved flow in the balanced adjustable with it's more streamlined poppet, but the differences were not noticeable.
However, if you put both an Adjustable and a Balanced Adjustable on a Mk 3, you could definitely tell the difference in performance as the IP fell at lower tank pressures with the Balanced Adjustable giving much lower breathing resistance at low tank pressures.
The same basic principles hold true today. On a unbalanced regulator like the Mk 2, a balanced second stage will make a significant difference - yet they are still sold with unbalanced second stages, where you will notice the increase work of breathing at low tank pressures. For a novice diver that's not a bad thing as it will remind the diver to look at their SPG and end the dive before they run out of gas. With a high performance balanced first and second stage, the only warning you get in terms of increased work of breathing is in the last half breath you get from the tank.
However, on a balanced diaphragm first stage like the Mk 11 or Mk 17, you won't notice any difference in performance between otherwise comparable balanced and unbalanced second stages.
The C200 (which is non diver adjustable) and the C300 (which is diver adjustable) second stages were developed as Europeans have a preference for great performing un balanced second stages and that's pretty much exactly what they were designed to be. The C series second stages were designed by an Italian designer with extensive experience in high performance motorcycle carburetors and he did a superb job on the fluid dynamics of those second stages and they flow air very well.
The C350 is a evolutionary revision of the C300. It addresses a potential issue the C300 had with the poppet and guides rubbing a bit in sandy, silty conditions.
It is not a balanced design, but it is a very good performing design and at the moment the Mk 21 C350 and the Mk 17 C350 are arguably the best bangs for the buck offered by Scubapro.
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Subgear is a brand acquired/created by Scubapro as a means to compete with on line grey market dealers at a lower price point that the Scubapro line. The regulators are however the same as the similar looking Scubapro first and second stages. For example, the SG50 is a Mk 17 C350 with some cosmetic changes, while the SG30 is a cosmetically altered Mk 11 C350, and the SG10 is a Mk 2 with a C200 second stage.
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You might also notice the Tusa RS-790 looks a lot like a Scubapro Mk 17 S360, because it is. Scubapro designs it's own regulator and assembles them in it's factory in Italy, but the parts are made by Tabata on very specialized and high tech machines. It would not be cost effective for Scubapro to invest in that technology for the volume of regulators it sells, which is why companies like Tabata make regulators for several companies. In fact, just three companies - Tabata, Aqualung, and Beuchat produce the parts for the bulk of the regulators sold regardless of brand name. It doesn't mean those companies designed them, it just means they make the parts for them under contract.
In the case of Tabata and Scubapro, they've had a long standing relationship where Scubapro will contract with Tabata to produce Scubapro's designs, and in turn, Tabata will market a cosmetically altered design through TUSA, which is the acronym for Tabata USA.
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Scubapro also has an agreement with Halcyon where Halcyon allows Scubapro to sell some of it's technical dive equipment under the Scubapro name an in return Halcyon sells cosmetically altered Scubapro regs under the Halcyon name. The H-75P is a Mk 25, and the H-50D is a Mk 17, and for second stages the Halo is a G250V and the Aura is an R390. Same regs, same parts kits as their Scubapro counterparts.