Elmi, there is simply not the real demand. At the moment rec/tec divers are only at the initial evolutionary stage of knowing that a BOV is a good thing to have.Do you not see a market of the Osel ALV BOV for us rebreather divers who have loop direction flow from left to right?
If your figures are right, what i assume, i and sure many others would be interested
If i look at the GG shrimp, it goes like hot cake.
Is it really about the production ( engineering) cost not to offer left to right or is there some other reasoning (logic) behind?
As you can tell by divers not knowing what the actual WOB is in OC and CC modes for the various BOVs they buy and that most of them fail or simply do not have CE.
Heck most divers still have no idea what the WOB of their rebreather is.... let alone an individual component.
If anyone disagrees with me, just tell me the WOB in CC and OC modes of the second best performing BOV that you can buy?
It will only be once the industry matures to a point where divers start seriously demanding WOB testing for their BOVs and only buying the best. That it might be worth OSEL offering a left to right flow ALVBOV. If a rebreather manufacturer, company or individual wants to submit to discuss a PO for an OEM run of left to right ALVBOVs, just email sales@opensafety.eu to discuss. There will be a significant MOQ!
The ALVBOV has the lowest available WOB and is the only BOV available that is CE certified for use to 100m in both OC and CC modes.
If there is not the obvious demand, which there is not as evidenced by the "GG shrimp selling like hot cake", it is pointless OSEL spending the quite considerable cash on retooling the ALVBOV for left to right flow and having it re certified to EN14143 and EN250 by SGS. It is a non-core business to OSEL as they will never sell a left to right flow rebreather.
Now for those that have left to right flow rebreathers already and are interested or for those manufacturers offering these rebreathers who want to lower their units WOB and offer a safer BOV or enable the unit to be more easily CE certified, there is a different perspective.
Agreed. Of course the use of high He mixes drops your WOB, BUT the ratio of the difference remains unchanged.Brad, whats the difference in WOB when using a Helium-based gas with something like 30%+ in it when considering your OC regulators.
I am sure that Simon mitigates his lack of knowledge of the WOB for the OC aspect of the BOV by using a less-dense gas (trimix) than required for the CE which means the WB will be automatically less...
Is it safer breathing off a lower WOB loop/reg/BOV option? I think the answer will always be of course, but we do not yet know where the dividing line is! Or if when you bailout, what is safer. At the moment when Simon bails off his loop, he probably guesses he is going to a similar WOB using his OCB from the loop and then if he goes to an OC reg, it is 1/3 the WOB (assuming equal He content across the 3 gases).
I am not aware of any published WOB testing having been done on any regulators/BOVs with 30%He mixes. I am sure a clever engineer could probably work it out from the maths knowing the published WOB testing from in Air at 40m/50m and 10/90He at 100m though.
Simple engineering design and then verification by formal unmanned testing to get the lowest WOB to offer ALARP to divers.I'd like to know why actually, I snipped off the rest of you post because it goes off on a bit of a tangent. Does not seem like a simple fact to me that L to R and R to L would be fundamentally different.
It 'could' have been made to be left to right, but this is the opposite flow direction to what commercial and military rebreathers use. and there just isn't the demand for it.
A company has spent the money on R&D to supply BOV in Right to Left flow that has low WOB in both CC and OC modes.sorry Brad you lost me. can you explain what gas flow direction has got to do with WOB?
The direction itself is irrelevant, other than you either don't know what the WOB is for most left to right BOVs or it really just isn't all that good.
Randy logically correct. But for the Shrimp, please correct me if I am wrong; there is no unmanned testing published confirming this?Nonsense! All else being equal, there is no difference in WOB going from L/R or R/L. To say otherwise is just marketing spin!
The difference is in what other BOVs are available in the two flow directions and their comparative WOB performance. Until a manufacturer steps up to the plate and makes a better L-R flow BOV with much lower WOB, at the moment the best BOV WOB performance both OC and CC is available only in a R-L configuration.
What kind of problems only happen to divers with a BOV?maybe the kind of problems that only happen to divers with a BOV.
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