My lp 85's have 3200 in em right now. Which gives me 103 cu ft each or 206 cuft on my back. Even if a compressor will only fill to 3000 there's no reason for you to get short fills other than laziness on the part of filler.
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LP95s are full at 2640, not 2450.
Or better yet, understand the equation and just memorize it.
Rick - are you sure that's right, that under the US system tank volumes are assessed at the rated overfill pressure, not the nominal maximum fill pressure? I have tanks from several different manufacturers and I believe (I'm not sure) that the convention used varies across manufacturers.Tanks are generally rated at some overfill pressure...
A LP 85 holds 85 CF at 2640 psi. At 2400 psi it holds about 77 CF.
An AL 80 holds 80 CF at 3100 psi; 77.4 CF at 3000 psi
The only tanks I know of that are rated at their fill pressure are HP (and 3442 psi) steels that don't have a "+" rating when they come from the manufacturer - and that's a fairly recent phenomenon.Rick - are you sure that's right, that under the US system tank volumes are assessed at the rated overfill pressure, not the nominal maximum fill pressure?Rick Murchison:Tanks are generally rated at some overfill pressure...
On a side note to the original question of the thread.. shoudn't this type of knowledge be explained (if not in school) at least in the most basic "open water" scuba training?
is the volume always directly related to pressure assuming the same temperature
Oops, my mistake. It sounded like maybe you weren't sure.Ah yes...but...if you re-read my original question, it had nothing to do with pressure or volume of gas with respect to temperature...I know Boyles Law