markmantei
Contributor
Depends on the diving, the 2 HP130's equal about 3 seasons of air fills, but not very many trimix fills.No offense or anything, but tanks are a pretty minor expense in the grand scheme of this activity.
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Depends on the diving, the 2 HP130's equal about 3 seasons of air fills, but not very many trimix fills.No offense or anything, but tanks are a pretty minor expense in the grand scheme of this activity.
I thought the reason the pre-1990 (it may be a date in the late 80's, but I think we are talking about the same thing) aluminum tanks were on the "negatory" list is because of potential sustained load cracking of that specific alloy. If that is the case, I don't see that they would be "just as safe today as the day they were purchased."
Now that said, I have not researched it enough to know if the whole thing is biased or proven to be untrue; just that I have read about the "given" reason being the potential cracking. If anyone can speak to this, I'm interested.
Depends on the diving, the 2 HP130's equal about 3 seasons of air fills, but not very many trimix fills.
Tanks are a fraction of the cost of lights, drysuits, computers, and lots of other equipment that frankly gets replaced a whole lot more often. I wasn't even thinking of the cost of fills...
Not that I would just throw my tank out in the snow and rain for storage, but can drafts and such in a shed shorten the life to a few seasons? (Yes, I'm tank shopping, and yes I would be storing them in a shed.)
Okay, fair enough, and I do understand the basic concept. I was just surprised that it would reduce the life of a steel tank from 50+ years to a few seasons, given that even a drafty shed will likely have a roof and walls keeping out sun and rain. I see a lot of steel tanks in Florida that I believe are decades old (for example old Scubapro Faber 95's), and to me, from boating experience, a hot, salty, sunny climate is one of the worst when it comes to metal. That said, I'm just getting into tank ownership, and looking at used tanks, hence why I'm reading the thread.