mi000ke
Contributor
- Messages
- 1,144
- Reaction score
- 1,739
- Location
- Massachusetts & Grand Cayman Island
- # of dives
- 200 - 499
I have been using an old Canon s110 point & shoot and a Canon housing just to get used to underwater photography. That housing is a simple set-up with a fixed port and one primary 0-ring around the housing enclosure that I cleaned and greased before every dive, as it took only about 5 minutes. I recently upgraded to a Sony A6400 and a Seafrogs/Meikon underwater housing with a VPS-100 vacuum pump leak detection system. The Seafrogs housing has a removable port and pump vent, so a few more 0-rings and seals to deal with.
The Seafrogs housing has a vent into which the pump valve is screwed. When the valve is not in use the vent is closed with a screw-in plug (o-rings sit around the vent and the plug). I’ve tested (on land) the pump with and without camera and had no problem getting an air-tight seal (valve light goes from red to green when adequate pressure is reached). However, this is the first housing I have owned with the pump system, and I will be using it for the first time in a couple of weeks (and plan to dive with it empty the first time just to make sure it’s working properly), and have couple of questions:
If the valve indicates an air tight seal, can I be confident that either there is no debris (hair, sand, etc.) on the o-rings, or if there is, it is not affecting the ability to get a water-tight seal? In other words, if I get an air-tight seal, can I assume I do not need to clean the o-rings? (I’m trying to avoid having to clean the port o-ring every dive, as the port is a real PITA to install – hard to align the threads and requires a lot of force to get it to seat properly to be able to screw it on.)
Seafrogs recommends not diving with the valve installed, so the housing needs to be depressurized, (using the valve – the housing remains sealed), the valve removed, and the vent plug reinstalled. Does pressurizing create a tight seal that might be lost once the housing is depressurized, or can I be confident that the seal will hold even once the housing is depressurized?
The Seafrogs housing has a vent into which the pump valve is screwed. When the valve is not in use the vent is closed with a screw-in plug (o-rings sit around the vent and the plug). I’ve tested (on land) the pump with and without camera and had no problem getting an air-tight seal (valve light goes from red to green when adequate pressure is reached). However, this is the first housing I have owned with the pump system, and I will be using it for the first time in a couple of weeks (and plan to dive with it empty the first time just to make sure it’s working properly), and have couple of questions:
If the valve indicates an air tight seal, can I be confident that either there is no debris (hair, sand, etc.) on the o-rings, or if there is, it is not affecting the ability to get a water-tight seal? In other words, if I get an air-tight seal, can I assume I do not need to clean the o-rings? (I’m trying to avoid having to clean the port o-ring every dive, as the port is a real PITA to install – hard to align the threads and requires a lot of force to get it to seat properly to be able to screw it on.)
Seafrogs recommends not diving with the valve installed, so the housing needs to be depressurized, (using the valve – the housing remains sealed), the valve removed, and the vent plug reinstalled. Does pressurizing create a tight seal that might be lost once the housing is depressurized, or can I be confident that the seal will hold even once the housing is depressurized?