You going to go replace the non replaceable, pressed in orfice inside the seal-beating-sized Revo triple MAV when they do?Or if you want to retain the CMF function, upgrade to an Apollo A320 Oxy; factory set by Open Safety to 19bar IP
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You going to go replace the non replaceable, pressed in orfice inside the seal-beating-sized Revo triple MAV when they do?Or if you want to retain the CMF function, upgrade to an Apollo A320 Oxy; factory set by Open Safety to 19bar IP
Any reason you can't use a needle valve on the rEvo?
I'm running a Fathom on my KISS. I have the first stage blocked @ 200psi. I don't think I will personally ever want to go deeper than that will allow me.Theoretically, not at all. I've talked to a few different divers about it.
Which would you recommend?
- brett
For anyone wondering what that translates to: 200psi is just under 14bar. So the zero flow point would be <140meters. Paul Raymaeker recommends staying 20m above that point (and even there the flow-rate is reduced significantly). So in essence a 200psi IP is good to around ~120m / 390ft. Definitely plenty for almost everyone.I'm running a Fathom on my KISS. I have the first stage blocked @ 200psi. I don't think I will personally ever want to go deeper than that will allow me.
To keep things very simple (which is what you want below 100M) I just use a Dil that will give me a 1.2 SP, while I am at the bottom as 90% of the run time will be well above 100M.Can I ask a dumb question about a CMF please...
The requirement is for a constant amount of oxygen to flow into the loop as the body metabolises the same amount regardless of depth.
My understanding of a CMF (constant mass flow) "orifice". There's a load of physics regarding gas flows through a tight hole. It's about the absolute pressure of the gas behind pushing "a certain amount of molecules" through the orifice. The pressure differential on the output side doesn't matter much, at least within a couple of bar. If the input pressure varies, the amount of molecules of gas shoved through the hole will drastically change.
Q: how much would the output differ for different absolute pressures on the input side of the orifice? Is it very non-linear?
Thank you for those very informative links.@Wibble and anyone else who's interested, here's some info about CMF which may be useful.
To answer your question, if you increase the pressure on one side the velocity won't change, but due to the increased density more molecules will flow. It's linear and this is where a needle valve can be useful. You can increase the pressure of P1 and reduce the orifice to maintain the flow at your base metabolic rate. So even if you double the density (or pressure) of IP, the total number of molecules won't exceed your metabolic rate at a shallower depth. Hopefully that makes sense... definitely recommend the article and video.
Great video by Richard Harris: