barrygoss
CCRx Supporter
No science.
There is no science behind the topic of this thread.
My least conservative instructor set an 11 hour limit for the scrubber. It worked for him and he had done it regularly.
I have set a 6 hour limit open water and 4 hour limit overhead (but after 3.5 hours I am really not happy... so!).
Done it plenty of times no problem.
Back home I pull out the scrubber from the can. Dry the can and replace the little absorbent pad at the bottom. Put the scrubber back in. Seal the scrubber in the can overnight with a top. Let the head dry overnight before recalibrating the next day.
There are many variables we are dealing with and there is no science behind it.
mmm What unit are you diving? it's either a pelagian, a prism, a hammerhead or a nautlius? anything else and you're outside of the tested limits of the scrubber and putting the CO2 hit down to storing the can for more than 3 days, and not exceeding the tested limits (i.e. you're attributing it to teaching error not user error)
The science is the chemical reaction of the lime, (those CE tests people bang on about for durations of use at depth at certain times) the duration above and beyond that is unknown....
But hell, what do I know, I read a load of stuff on the internet and grabbed a rebreather and went diving.
Regards,
B