Dutchman
Contributor
I was reading the manual from Aqualung. They suggest a yearly inspection. I was wondering if this is something everyone does? I understand the regulators but what could go wrong with a BC?
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Dutchman:I was reading the manual from Aqualung. They suggest a yearly inspection. I was wondering if this is something everyone does? I understand the regulators but what could go wrong with a BC?
Mark Vlahos:I don't have the statistics in front of me but I read somwhere that BC's account for the most common equipment failure in diving. This may be because many of us, myself included, do not get their BC's inspected anually, while we are pretty good about having our regulators properly maintained.
If a BC fails it will pretty much go in one of two ways...
It will not hold air for one of many reasons, either you cant get the air in, or the air escapes too easily. The end result of this type of failure is you need to swim up to the surface, and once on the surface you may be too heavy to easily stay there. Hopefully with proper weighting you will be able to not have a giant problem in this area.
The other type of failure is one where the inflator constantly adds air to the aircell even when you don't want it to. The end result of this type of failure could be as severe as an unexpected uncontrollable ascent to the surface. Many people think of this as the "Trident Missile" scenario. This can be quite dangerous, even life threatening.
I do regularly inspect my BC, about the only thing that I don't do is have the inflator rebuilt every year. I check the aircell for problems by removing it and looking for defects. I check the function of the inflator and make sure that all fittings and valves are in good shape.
The choice is yours, but try to make it an informed one.
Mark Vlahos
Mark Vlahos:I don't have the statistics in front of me but I read somwhere that BC's account for the most common equipment failure in diving. This may be because many of us, myself included, do not get their BC's inspected anually, while we are pretty good about having our regulators properly maintained.
If a BC fails it will pretty much go in one of two ways...
It will not hold air for one of many reasons, either you cant get the air in, or the air escapes too easily. The end result of this type of failure is you need to swim up to the surface, and once on the surface you may be too heavy to easily stay there. Hopefully with proper weighting you will be able to not have a giant problem in this area.
The other type of failure is one where the inflator constantly adds air to the aircell even when you don't want it to. The end result of this type of failure could be as severe as an unexpected uncontrollable ascent to the surface. Many people think of this as the "Trident Missile" scenario. This can be quite dangerous, even life threatening.
I do regularly inspect my BC, about the only thing that I don't do is have the inflator rebuilt every year. I check the aircell for problems by removing it and looking for defects. I check the function of the inflator and make sure that all fittings and valves are in good shape.
The choice is yours, but try to make it an informed one.
Mark Vlahos