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@oppo I think it is safer to tell them it is 11L. They can workout themselves the real capacity once they measure the pressure.
If you tell them it is 12L they may multiply 12L by the pressure in bar and double count the overpressure ?
One could say the same about the liters rating. What seems odd to me is that you measure it at surface pressure, not actual pressure. The "cuft" rating is based on the volume of gas inside at a given pressure.personally I think that cubic feets are pretty useless as tank volume measurement
Well, that's where water volume comes in handy. My tanks are 10L, period. No matter the fill pressure. If I fill them to 200 bar, I'll have 2000 surface liters. 250 bar? 2500 surface liters. 300 bar? 3000 (minus 10% because compressibility) surface liters.I.e. an al80/11l tank that's supposed to hold 77.4cuft at 3000psi might actually contain 85.4cuft at 3300 psi.
It isn't, really.Seems counter intuitive to measure a tank's internal volume of gas based on how much uncompressed water it holds.
Is that really a rule or is it a myth? Does it have a written source in training materials?OWD rule of "be at the safety stop with at least 50 bar left"
Thanks.Ok - I didn't write them down today but they're 100. We don't have a "15L" on tomorrow but I'll take a snap at the filling station if I have time.
I think they're all from dive supply so probably the ones listed on page 93 here -
The 13L has a higher service pressure, but we also fill to 200 bar.
Retail Catalogue 2018-2019View attachment 500730
My OWD manual isn't easily accessible, but I'm pretty certain we were taught that during the OW class. I guess it's as much of a rule as your 500psi "rule", but a bit more conservative. If you're carrying a 15L it's a lot more conservative.Is that really a rule or is it a myth? Does it have a written source in training materials?
Tank factor never made any sense to me.Well, that's where water volume comes in handy. My tanks are 10L, period. No matter the fill pressure. If I fill them to 200 bar, I'll have 2000 surface liters. 250 bar? 2500 surface liters. 300 bar? 3000 (minus 10% because compressibility) surface liters.
It isn't, really.
10L tank, 200 bar left: 2000 surface liters left
12L tank, 100 bar left: 1200 surface liters left
15L tank, 50 bar left (you'd better be at the safety stop, mate!): 750 surface liters left.
RMV of 15 SLM, 15L tank: 1 bar/minute at the surface, 2 bar/minute at 10m, 4 bar/minute at 30m. 10L tank? 1.5 bar/minute at the surface, 3 bar/minute at 10m, 6 bar/minute at 30m. RMV of 20 SLM, 10L tank? That's 2 bar/minute at the surface, 4 bar/minute at 10m and 8 bar/minute at 30m.
The math is so easy that I can do it in my head at 30m. What I can't do, even stone cold sober topside, is wrapping my head around your feet, cubic feet, psis and tank factors
The only weird thing about the metric tank capacity system is the OWD rule of "be at the safety stop with at least 50 bar left". If I'm diving my 10L single and my buddy carries a D7x300, she'll have 40% more gas than I have when we're both at 50 bar. If she carries a single 15, she'll have 50% more gas than I have.
AFAIU the difference between SAC and RMV is whether it's at depth or topside, but I may well have misunderstood. I've logged my gas consumption since I bought my first gear which included an AI PDC. It varies between 12 lpm and 20+ lpm, depending on conditions and exposure protection (wetsuit or drysuit).I would calculate based on SAC rather than RMV
Many dive boats have a similar rule. I doubt you'll find it in any training materials, some boats have such a rule and some don't. Probably more common on boats that cater to vacation divers than boats who cater to technical divers.Is that really a rule or is it a myth? Does it have a written source in training materials?