halocline
Contributor
I'm debating between these two choices for a backmount pony mounted on the right side of the main tank upside down with a left mount valve and 40" hose run under the right arm. Main gas is HP100. Diving 90' or less in all cases....
I'm leaning to the steel HP 23.
New divers like yourself ask specific questions like this from time to time, and the responses are often much as they were in this thread, for good reason. You are debating between two options that are probably both bad decisions. I would politely suggest that you consider exactly why you want the redundant bottle, what actual purpose it serves, and what real-life problem it solves, based on the diving scenarios you are in. I would definitely discuss it with experienced technical divers that use redundant gas for specific reasons, and have many years of experience with the whole issue of redundant gas.
Here's my take: I never use redundant gas in recreational, open water, buddy diving, because I never allow myself to be in a situation where I don't have immediate access to either the surface and/or my buddy. If neither of those things are true, what you have is a de facto overhead situation, and to safely dive in an overhead situation requires far more than carrying a pony bottle. I did not have a full appreciation for this until I learned to dive in a 'real' overhead. (I'm primarily a cave diver) There is a reason that technical divers (good ones, anyhow) have trained in a whole variety of ways to deal with problems underwater. The extra gas is only a small part of it.
However, if you are truly determined to dive with two tanks on your back, forget the back mounted pony and learn to dive with doubles. It's a FAR better solution to having more gas than you need and provides real redundancy. If you absolutely insist that what you need is a pony, pick either one (the 19 or 23cft), it doesn't make a damn bit of difference, but sling it so that you have some semblance of control over it. Most people use AL bottles for bailout because they tend to change your buoyancy less than steel bottles. A 30 or 40cft bottle is probably a better investment in that it has real use as a deco bottle down the road if you go that route. But ponies do have their uses; mine is for filling tires and checking regulators.
And since you are asking for people with more experience than yourself to freely give advice, I suggest you try harder to be gracious in their responses, even if it is not what you want to hear. You're not paying for any of this!