bleeb
Contributor
When I worked in a fill station down here in North Florida, we were pumping about 20,000 cu ft of nitrox a month and 8,000 cu ft of trimix. Since tanks usually come back with a third of their gas in them that equates to around 150 fills a month. There are probably about 25 shops in North Florida (that's just a guess) doing these fills with varying monthly volumes. If the average is (and this is another guess) half of what we were doing that would still be amost 22500 fills of doubles per year. Additionally, we have a lot of folks with their own compressors.
This has been going on since the mid 80's but the popularity of cave diving has increased greatly in recent years, say since around 2000 when "The Last Dive" came out. Still, I'd guess we've seen 10 years at the higher rate and 20 years at maybe a quarter of that.
Another piece of the puzzle is that most people don't bring doubles down here, they rent them (it's only $10/day, for gosh sakes!) so the tanks that have been seeing these overpressures are the same small group of tanks for the most part.
So as a rough WAG, that's a lifetime total of 337,500 commercial fills for North Florida, with an unknown number of 'private' fills, but which may be within an order of magnitude either way. While the privately-owned fills are probably almost entirely privately owned tanks, which means filling the same tanks over and over again, the commercial fills are split between privately owned tanks and rentals. The latter possibly see more use and thereby accounting for a larger fraction of fills, biasing downward the total number of tanks in the population. So, at least for commercial fills, it sounds like the number of unique tanks is maybe at most somewhere in the five figures, possibly towards the lower end. This would be considerably below the number of tanks it took to see a catastrophic failure of a 6351 tank (roughly one in a million tanks, and likely tens of millions of fills or more).