Fair question. Oxygen fire safety is a continuum rather than binary OK/explosion. Measuring and controlling all the variables is difficult so the recommendations and practices tend toward the safest in order to make up for some of the unknown or unforeseeable variables.
Obviously the vast vast majority of time using a fast operating valve is fine as demonstrated by the millions of times it is done without an explosion or fire. The Oxygen charging system at the UDT/SEAL base in Coronado operated fine for years with 1/4" ball valves — until it blew up in the early 1970s.
Valves are measured by the
Flow coefficient or C
v. Most rotating spindle valves used in Scuba diving have flat seats:
View attachment 733857
I couldn't find a C
v chart for this valve but flat seat valves' flow looks something like this:
Needle valve seats are more like this:
View attachment 733859
Needle valve seat C
v curves are much flatter, meaning the percentage of the valve's flow is more proportional to the number of turns of the spindle.