You'll also need a mouthpiece adapter. If you don't want to make one, www.ScubaTools.com has them for @ $21
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You'll also need a mouthpiece adapter. If you don't want to make one, www.ScubaTools.com has them for @ $21
You'll also need a mouthpiece adapter. If you don't want to make one, www.ScubaTools.com has them for @ $21
Different strokes. I find the converse to be true. Again, for me it might be 1 in 20 regs that have to come off of the hose for a minor tweak.but I do find the inline adjustment to be infinitely faster
It's designed to fit in the mouthpiece as well as use the rubber gasket if you have the mouthpiece off. But again: different strokes. Not that I'm calling you a stroke.I don't have to remove the mouthpiece
It's designed to fit in the mouthpiece as well as use the rubber gasket if you have the mouthpiece off. But again: different strokes. Not that I'm calling you a stroke.
My somewhat limited experience with regulator servicing is similar to yours, but we recently had a thread in which one of the participants said that he averaged about 8 minutes for the complete job. I do not see how it is remotely possible, but he insisted it was true, and several other posters said something similar. I have worked side-by-side with two different shop technicians in two different shops, and the time it required was similar to what you are reporting.Regulator maintenance is time intensive. That $60+ that the shop charges to do the maintenance may seem like a lot of money, but it's not once you realize how much work and parts you're paying for. It will probably take me 2+ hours to complete a single reg. Maybe the techs at the dive shop can do a reg per hour (I don't know), but they are getting paid for their time.
That was my thoughts when I learned how to do it and got the necessary tools. Eventually, though, I fully realized the extent of something I have known all my life--I am not a DIY kind of guy.. I'm a bit of a DIY guy and I thought if I did the maintenance I would reduce my cost.
Most 'dirty' regs require 10 minutes in the ultrasonic. I take about a half hour to rebuild a first stage, two seconds and replace all the o-rings on all the hoses, including the ones on the SPG. It takes three to four hours to walk someone through the process and teach them how regs work. I imagine their first 'solo' experience will take a couple of hours, more if they don't take a lot of pics. Perhaps if I rebuilt regs every day, I could quicken the process, but I would rather concentrate on being thorough than quick. I worked as an automotive line tech most of my life. The guys who rushed through their jobs usually found their customers rushing back to have them do it over. Slow is smooth. Smooth is fast. You save a lot of time by not trying to save time.one of the participants said that he averaged about 8 minutes for the complete job
"Stupid" is an apt description of Poseidons in general. . I've been through their class and have to scratch my head at their gratuitous over-engineering. Maybe they used failed engineers from Saab? Maybe it's just a Swedish perspective? I rarely admit that I know how they work as I don't want people foisting their regs at me. Glad to loan you the tools, but I'll walk away while you're piddling with it. I've also taken classes for Atomic, Zeagle & Aqualung and I have yet to meet the reg that is anywhere near complex as an E2SE GM carburetor.doesn't fit the stupid large bore of the Poseidon mouthpieces, that's why I worked around it
I understand them just fine. They are anything but simple. The parts cost more too.people just don't understand them because they're so different