Hello Peter,
Good to see you made it to the DIY “Dark Side”
Actually, you can work on most regulators without any special tools. But if you are going to order the book from Scuba Tools anyway, you may as well get a few items that make working on your stuff easier. One tool you must have is a Intermediate Pressure gage. http://www.scubatools.com/p-499-tech-diver-ip-gauge-scubapro-atomic-aquatics-tusa.aspx or http://www.scubatools.com/p-500-tech-diver-ip-gauge-universal-inflator.aspx A tool they have that I find handy is the Scuba Pro multi wrench. http://www.scubatools.com/p-458-scubapro-multi-tool-aluminum.aspx Awap is the master DIY guy and he doesn’t need one, but I find it useful. I’m a bit anal about o-rings, so I like to have an assortment of bullets and picks too http://www.scubatools.com/p-470-scubapro-piston-bullet-brass.aspx http://www.scubatools.com/p-391-oring-pick-set-2-soft-brass.aspx but, you can also make your own picks from brazing rods and bullets from plastic straws, ink pens etc. An in-line adjuster is nice to have but again, not necessary.
The T handle is not necessary as you can get a couple of bolts: 7/16-20 & 3/8-24 for a few bucks at the hardware store. For the 1” yoke nut wrench, get a used one for a dollar from the pawn shop and grind it down as needed.
So to answer your question, you can actually get by without any special tools, in fact, if you only service your own gear every few years you may as well spend the money on diving…..but, if you get the fever and make a hobby of it, you’ll want a few toys on your work bench. List the regulators you have and others can chime in with their favorite tool ideas.
Couv
Good to see you made it to the DIY “Dark Side”
Actually, you can work on most regulators without any special tools. But if you are going to order the book from Scuba Tools anyway, you may as well get a few items that make working on your stuff easier. One tool you must have is a Intermediate Pressure gage. http://www.scubatools.com/p-499-tech-diver-ip-gauge-scubapro-atomic-aquatics-tusa.aspx or http://www.scubatools.com/p-500-tech-diver-ip-gauge-universal-inflator.aspx A tool they have that I find handy is the Scuba Pro multi wrench. http://www.scubatools.com/p-458-scubapro-multi-tool-aluminum.aspx Awap is the master DIY guy and he doesn’t need one, but I find it useful. I’m a bit anal about o-rings, so I like to have an assortment of bullets and picks too http://www.scubatools.com/p-470-scubapro-piston-bullet-brass.aspx http://www.scubatools.com/p-391-oring-pick-set-2-soft-brass.aspx but, you can also make your own picks from brazing rods and bullets from plastic straws, ink pens etc. An in-line adjuster is nice to have but again, not necessary.
The T handle is not necessary as you can get a couple of bolts: 7/16-20 & 3/8-24 for a few bucks at the hardware store. For the 1” yoke nut wrench, get a used one for a dollar from the pawn shop and grind it down as needed.
So to answer your question, you can actually get by without any special tools, in fact, if you only service your own gear every few years you may as well spend the money on diving…..but, if you get the fever and make a hobby of it, you’ll want a few toys on your work bench. List the regulators you have and others can chime in with their favorite tool ideas.
Couv