We have different ways of measuring pressure - I dive a 10 litre steel cylinder with a fill of 210 bar if I'm lucky
Hi Venus,
OK, so your current tank is a 72 cf steel tank. 210 bar converts to just over 3045 psi. What is the fill capacity of your tank?
Maybe someone knows of a metric table for tank specifications?
Venus, pm me with the brand of tank you have and the fill capacity, and what tank you are looking to convert to.
If you tell me how much weight you are wearing with your current set-up, the table will tell us how much weight you will need, all things being equal (exposure equipment, fresh/salt water) for the tank you want to switch to.
You just need to look at the empty buoyancy of each of the two tanks. Let's say your specific Al tank is
2 lbs positive at the end of the dive; your correct weighting will already include 2 lbs to compensate. Let's say your specific steel tank is
-7 lbs at the end of the dive. So the weighting difference in going from Al to steel will be 7 lbs less plus the 2 lbs compensation lbs you no longer need. Therefore, you will wear
9 lbs less with that steel tank than your Al tank. For me, that would mean that while I wear 16 lbs with a specific Al tank, I could wear only 7 lbs with a specific steel tank. It's simpler than it sounds. Remember, though, this simplistic example will work for strictly changing tanks, not also other equipment or salinity or figuring out weighting from scratch.
Most steel tanks start out quite negative (the - numbers on the table) and end up being still slightly negative when empty . Most aluminum tanks start out a little negative, but end up being a little positive when empty, so you have to compensate for this buoyancy characteristic by wearing more weight with aluminum.
Hope that helps! :blinking: