Like freediving with the empty tank strap on his back? Not sure I understood you.It could happen if the user essentially empties it and then descends with that empty tank.
Filling??? please read my post againOr someone does it while filling or servicing the tank - usually done by a "dive professional".
Servicing? How would salt water STAY in a tank from servicing? Even considering that as a possibility, I can guarantee you it's not the case, the tanks were serviced by me and I can rest assure you it was done properly.
I wasn't offering one awap, I was asking the "experts". Yours wasn't very convincing.What is your explanation?
Really? And how would that happen?Unless the tank was submerged with the valve open and empty, water comes in one way; through the filling process.
I can accept that as valid reason, but I would like someone to explain how the hell am I getting so much water into ONE SINGLE TANK out of HUNDREDS of tanks, kind of an unlikely scenario don't you think?4 fl oz means you're getting one hell of a wet fill.
But forget about all that anyways, it's salt water.
lol, that was a funny one.Oh yeah, as awap's post reminded me, there is another way. Someone could fail to dry it out after hydro, slap a valve on.
I think your reading skills is lacking some serious maintenance, it's A TANK out of a batch of A HUNDRED, please read the post again.If I was finding that much water in a tank, only filled from a single compressor, then the compressor is lacking some serious maintenance.
lol, "there", is where I make my living.I would never fill my tanks there again.
This is a great illustration on how scubaboard members are quick to crucify LDS, often enough, with no factual basis