That's very interesting, because is still sounds like you are. I mean, hell, if the burst pressure is 7,500, we can go on ahead and jack those babies up to 6,000 easy and get double the dive!
Steel is not aluminum... why don't you take a look at the statistics for tank failures and see how many were steel?
Actually doing it is one thing, acting as the expert and brushing it off to the point of advocation is a whole other thing.
Well, on this issue of "looking at the statistics of cylinder failures", I think with some DEEP research, you might be surprised which material has more failures. You assume that by quoting the DOT qualification procedures for qualification, people are supporting the practice of overfilling....that simply isn't so.
This is what I said in my original post.....................
philellis:...it is equally as safe (or unsafe, depending on your viewpoint) to overfill an aluminum cylinders as it is to overfill a cylinder made of any other material under the DOT standards. Regardless of the material, they are all subjected to EXACTLY the same qualification tests. ALL OF THEM (even steel cylinders) must fail in a leak-before-burst mode at some time after 10,000 cycles to be approved. If a cylinder never fails during the testing, the test is a failure.
Many will CLAIM that there is some sort of evidence that aluminum is less safe than steel for overfilling, but few can produce anything other than anecdotal evidence. Overfilling cylinders, while done fairly frequently, is entering into completely unknown (from an engineering perspective) territory. I don't know of ANY scuba cylinder company that has completed and published any engineering tests on the impact of overfilling scuba cylinders.
I cannot back off of this statement, because it is absolutely, 100% correct. There is no dispute about it. Now, I phrased this statement to say it is equally as safe, OR UNSAFE, to overfill either. Personally, since that is a complete absence of an engineering data and testing by any cylinder manufacturer about the impact of overfilling cylinders, regardless of material construction, I don't suggest overfilling aluminum cylinders, steel cylinders, composite cylinders, or clay cylinders. But regardless, NO MATTER WHAT MATERIAL IS USED....IF it is safe to overfill a steel cylinder, the evidence indicates that it is equally safe to overfill an aluminum cylinder. There is no quantified, document engineering study that says one is "stronger" or "safer" than the other.
Now, you are one brightgator. You KNOW that the anecdotal evidence on overfilling steel cylinders in cave country is exactly what it is.......anecdotal evidence. Engineers and scientists may START a study as a result of anecdotal evidence, but they NEVER use it for statistically valid conclusions.
There is a bottom line from a testing, engineering, design, and qualification perspective.......it is EQUALLY as safe or unsafe to overfill aluminum cylinders as it is steel cylinders. But then, if you whistle through the graveyard, it makes the walk a little less scary.
Phil Ellis
Discount Scuba Gear at DiveSports.com - Buy Scuba Diving Equipment & Snorkeling Equipment