- Messages
- 99,784
- Reaction score
- 102,670
- Location
- On the Fun Side of Trump's Wall
- # of dives
- 2500 - 4999
You don't even have to do that much. Almost always there will be early warning signs. A slight "bubbling" in your reg after the inhale (most divers will just instinctively crank up the tension on the second stage spring and forget about it) ... a minor "fizzing" from the first stage (how many of y'all do regular bubble checks?) ... or a noticeable resistance at the beginning of that first breath of the dive. Any of those things MAY be an indication that it's time to get your reg serviced. None of them will cause impending panic or death ... or necessarily even an inconvenience to the diver. But ... like those champagne bubbles that you sometimes will see coming out the join between your HP hose and SPG ... it's an indication that you will want to have it serviced before something more serious goes wrong.Is that the only other option? Is it this or "regular service"? How do you know when to replace tires or have your brakes serviced?
"Regular service" is unnecessary if a diver learns to inspect their regulators and identify incipient and minor problems indicating a need for service before the problem seriously impacts performance.
I can think of two reasons for this ...Instructors who preach "regular service" during a nitrox course are using the training time students bought to hawk their business.
- Instructor training includes an emphasis on selling ... products, services, and continuing education. Depending on the circumstances of their employment, some instructors will take this emphasis to greater lengths than others.
- Liability ... what do you suppose would happen if your instructor DIDN'T tell you about this and someday you had an accident because you neglected to get your regulator serviced. I'd be willing to bet either you or your surviving family members would have a lawyer investigating WHY this instructor didn't follow his training and promote the products, services, and continuing education that his agency told him he should.
... Bob (Grateful Diver)