W W Meixner
Banned
Its not 150% over WP, its 50% over WP.
It is 150% OF the WP however, but thats a big difference and its not what you said.
Noted...thank you...correction made...
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
Its not 150% over WP, its 50% over WP.
It is 150% OF the WP however, but thats a big difference and its not what you said.
Ha ha. Accident case history! One video of a tank that was nearly rusted in two exploding and not hurting anyone. It was assumed to be in hydro and vis because "they wouldn't fill it if it wasn't". Got anything real?Victor...
Hydro/re-hydro is a practise/process/procedure which is manufacturer acceptable...conducted by trained professionals...using specialized equipment with built-in safety factors...for very short periods of time...filling a LP cylinder to 200% of its WP and diving with it is not acceptable by any scuba cylinder or scuba cylinder valve manufacturer...there is a difference between a service ''test''...and daily practical application...
Accident case history has already been provided on SB regarding this subject...suggest looking through the archives...
W...
Fair enough!No can do. I can, however, calculate and post the amount of gas predicted by the van der Waals equation.
Good thing I've been geeking out with a spreadsheet earlier, since that saved me about a ton of time. Using the most recent values for the van der Waals constants that I have available (CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 63rd Edition, 1982-1983) I get:
Now, @tbone1004 's post with the compressibility numbers made me a little concerned. Because although he'd gotten them from Wikipedia, Wikipedia had lifted those numbers from Perry's Handbook of Chemical Engineering which is sort of the bible for data like that.
Ha ha. Accident case history! One video of a tank that was nearly rusted in two exploding and not hurting anyone. It was assumed to be in hydro and vis because "they wouldn't fill it if it wasn't". Got anything real?
Post some examples, if you can.BRT...
There's more than that...we went through this less than a year ago...check PSI's web site...as a primary cylinder service trainer...they have the most complete reported accident registry...how accurate it is is anybodys guess...
Unfortunately...most incidents are never reported unless there are injuries and/or fatalities...and like so many investigations relating to ''scuba''...and who is actually conducting the investigation...wrong conclusions are more common than correct conclusions...as lack of industry knowledge...fails to detect ''root causes''...
Did the cylinder fail because...it was over-filled...it was not O2 cleaned...it was no longer serviceable...the fill station operator was not trained...or any combination of these or others...???
W...
Believe me, you can afford flowers for all the people who ever died from exploding steel scuba tanks that were in hydro and vis.
Firstly, 3600psi is not 200% of the Working Pressure, it's 136%-150% depending on your tilt.
Secondly, I'm not talking about "safe during hydro", I'm talking about representatives from Faber saying that it's fine to cave fill their LP85s, LP108s, and LP121s, among others.
You may think it is beat to death but still you appear to fill tanks to not exceed stamped WP. AND IT IS ALLOWED TO BE DONE. Your proceedure is the shops policy and not based on actual regulation either. If that is not understood then further converstaon is moot. So long as a tank at 70 degrees F is 3000 or less it is not over filled. Granted that has little to do with the over all topic but it does to yoru comment. You also refer to slow fills as a means to avoid this issue. I have yet to find a shop that has any tank fill demand that does that. they can not afford to. So you water bath them to cool them down so as not to be filling a 130F sun heated tank and instead filling a 80F tank. To many tanks get 2 minute fills and they are out the door using the if you cant wait you get what you get ligic. They hit the 70F water and the psi drops to something far below WP. Lets see 5psi per degree adn a 120 degree tank filled and heated by the fill to 160 is 90 degrees over base temp and that is 450 psi. That 160F tank can be filled to 3450 and not violate any rules regarding the WP 3000 psi aspect. Ill repeat ,,,, a 3450 fill in those conditions is not an over fill.