idiot fish
Registered
Hi List,
Although the official word (from the manufacturer) isn't in yet - Thought it best to inform everyone that there may be a new way these things can kill us.
Brand new unit - new cells, first few dives were short shallow shore dives to familiarise myself before venturing deeper or longer.
After a few weeks (say 20 dives) I slowly started venturing longer and deeper. This is when the problem started to show.
At the start of the dive, calibration fine, able to hold reading of 1.0 for more than the 45mins dry linearity test. Descending to 6m, stop and check PO2 after O2 flush, PO2 reads 1.6 - no problem.
Off I go, 35 mins later I see the PO2 is rising on cell 3, when it reaches 1.45 set point was 1.3) I stop and do a dil flush, this shows that cell 3 is the correct one and cell 1 and cell 2 are wrong (as in feeding me with too high PO2)
I selected a lower setpoint and turned the dive monitoring the handsets.
After checking everything and carefully drying the cells etc etc and 'carefully' taking the unit down probably another 10 dives - each time the same.
Cells 1 and 2 were actually loosing output gradually throughout the dive. At the beginning - no problem, but they would drop almost linearly through the dives.
I have since changed the 2 offending cells for new ones and its perfect all three match and there is no time dependant drop.
So what we appear to have is new type of cell error that results in a loss of output with time (over a 30-40 min period) the same cells if left resting on a dive boat between dives start off the next dive working fine?!
After talking to the manufacturer they admit that it could be the temperature compensation board that is causing the problem - as in the dive time lengthens the hotter it gets. It may not we correcting for the temperature correctly.
The manufacturer have the cells now and are investigating. So the word isn't official yet - but I thought best to be safe and ask everyone not to assume just because the cells are ok at the start of a dive that they will not loose linearity during the dive.
I now do a number of dil flushes during a prolonged dive at regular intervals.
What do you suppose would have happened to me if cell three had been from the same batch? Chances are I wouldn't be here now as I would have had no
By the way - this is another very good reason to mix and match your cells age from different batches.
Safe diving
Although the official word (from the manufacturer) isn't in yet - Thought it best to inform everyone that there may be a new way these things can kill us.
Brand new unit - new cells, first few dives were short shallow shore dives to familiarise myself before venturing deeper or longer.
After a few weeks (say 20 dives) I slowly started venturing longer and deeper. This is when the problem started to show.
At the start of the dive, calibration fine, able to hold reading of 1.0 for more than the 45mins dry linearity test. Descending to 6m, stop and check PO2 after O2 flush, PO2 reads 1.6 - no problem.
Off I go, 35 mins later I see the PO2 is rising on cell 3, when it reaches 1.45 set point was 1.3) I stop and do a dil flush, this shows that cell 3 is the correct one and cell 1 and cell 2 are wrong (as in feeding me with too high PO2)
I selected a lower setpoint and turned the dive monitoring the handsets.
After checking everything and carefully drying the cells etc etc and 'carefully' taking the unit down probably another 10 dives - each time the same.
Cells 1 and 2 were actually loosing output gradually throughout the dive. At the beginning - no problem, but they would drop almost linearly through the dives.
I have since changed the 2 offending cells for new ones and its perfect all three match and there is no time dependant drop.
So what we appear to have is new type of cell error that results in a loss of output with time (over a 30-40 min period) the same cells if left resting on a dive boat between dives start off the next dive working fine?!
After talking to the manufacturer they admit that it could be the temperature compensation board that is causing the problem - as in the dive time lengthens the hotter it gets. It may not we correcting for the temperature correctly.
The manufacturer have the cells now and are investigating. So the word isn't official yet - but I thought best to be safe and ask everyone not to assume just because the cells are ok at the start of a dive that they will not loose linearity during the dive.
I now do a number of dil flushes during a prolonged dive at regular intervals.
What do you suppose would have happened to me if cell three had been from the same batch? Chances are I wouldn't be here now as I would have had no
By the way - this is another very good reason to mix and match your cells age from different batches.
Safe diving