Interesting video, I've never encountered the hoovering of the scrubber before. Until this video I assumed it was a cleaning (after use) thing, but implication is that the material is hoovered before it is packed, right?
Matt.
Our RB80 class taught us to fan the lime to remove dust when filling the scrubber. The bigger grade lime seemed much dustier than the smaller grade we use now.
Moved. If I get time (or another mod does) maybe we can split the 'how to test sorb' from the how long to keep bit as the latter probably needs to be searchable in future.
Then I shall soak some in washing up liquid, carry it around in my underwear for a fortnight, mix it with some Moroccan spices and if it still smokes well after all that will dive a fresh fill and put the experimental one in a hookah...
It has as much validity as yours but with extra fun added...
BTW freezing lime is a bad idea, you didn't need to experiment to find that out, it is known....
Last night, fueled by red wine and the naughty bits in Lip Service, I put some petrol in a bucket. I left it three hours then dropped a match on it... what do you know?
Results uploaded here : http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-7H2NGXhI9ms/TdLwpzzg88I/AAAAAAAAAIA/gcDdqTkeJkY/s1600/burnt+house.jpg
Interesting hoovering/fan strategy. I can see how that would reduce the dust. I've never done this, but it is interesting to hear of different techniques.
Does this reduce/eliminate the clumping? I cannot say that I have noticed any bother with clumping, btw, running the scrubber up to 5 hours in cold water (long dive, extra time in shallows) and up to 6 hours in hot water.
I'm diving an unmodified inspo (which I can cay now we are not in the JJ thread!).
Cheers
Matt.
Whilst these replies may be funny, they are aimed at a particular poster.
I will admit the above experiments are a bit out there, I would prefer to see you suggest a better method of testing or contribute with other theories on the Original purpose of the thread.
Please Gentleman, keep it friendly.
I think you are limited in some way because (correct me if I am wrong), you have only experience (a lot) with one rebreather and one specific scrubber and one specific scrubber design.
The scrubber you use has a hydrophobic membrane top and bottom. Good for keeping dust in (so the dust does not affect you, in my scrubber with a big metal mesh the dust can be a big problem).
It is also good to keep water out (i.e. the condensation dripping down from the top of the head, which you can see sitting on top in water form, on top of the hydrophobic membrane, which you find quite soaked after a long dive) -
BUT, equally, with the design you use, you keep the dust inside, and any condensation/water which may form inside, hence you see a lot more clumping than in other scrubbers.
I never quite understood what cause clumping, but I think after my experiment that it is
1. Caused by Sofnolime + H2O (condensation...)
2. Exacerbated by Sofnolime Dust
3. Aggravated by long time storage after use
I do not think that "clumping" is inconsequential. I believe,
4. it reduces the absorption ability of Sofnolime
5. MOST SERIOUSLY AND IMPORTANTLY: it can create a channel and cause CO2 bypass (a low probability event, random, and unpredictable).
These are my thoughts, but I'd like to hear from the "experts" (as I am admittedly not one and I am just trying to understand by observation):
f. Have they tested the scrubber not just after one exposure under EN14143:2003, but the same scrubber after many repeat dives over several days, and what are the results (and absent the testing how can they recommend usage of the same scrubber over multiple dives/days)?
Correct. For me a rebreather is a tool for a job; a means to an ends and not the ends in itself.
I only dive Inspiration, but I like to know about other units/styles...
OK. That makes sense. Yes - the inspo has the hydrophobic scrims rather than the megs metal mesh. I've dived with some meg divers (of course) and see them filling all the time using the just tip it in method. One of them will even dive all week (6 gas dives) on the same scrubber :crossfing
True, after a long dive you can pour it off.
I'd never even realised that the clumping was dust related. Sometimes it is there, sometimes not. Maybe this is to do with where in the tub you're filling from - I'll pay more attention and see if that's it.
I always thought it was an artifact of a) excessive moisture and b) over-packing. I get less clumping if I loose pack - sometimes none at all, but I like the dust idea.
#4 could be true but I'm unsure of #5 - once packed we can assume no channel as the material's shape is "self-packing". Are you saying that by adding water (moisture) and swelling the material (or dust) than a channel may form? Why would it? If anything is it not slightly more compact?
Me neither - I'm just a MP punter.
I think this test is not done, not part of the standard and the results unpublished - maybe Martin/Paul or someone else can come along and tell us.
I know that Paul does this type of thing - his results on cold-start scrubbers was fascinating (to me at least).
Cheers
Matt.
For me the fun appeals, if punctuated with some decent replies.
BTW, I dived, I survived, 31.7M on the Eddystone, 20M viz...most excellent....... I am the living embodiment of my experiment to see if a scrubber left for two weeks was OK to use, turns out it is....
So, the experiment continues, the very same scrubber has sat for yet another week and today saw me to 41.1M and back....
So, in summary, it had done
2 x 25M dives
Sat for two weeks
1 x 32M dive
Sat for one week
1 x 40M dive....
the scrubber has not been kept in a bag, it has sat sometimes in the cupboard and at other times in the bucket with the lid on.
I therefore conclude that it is safe to use a scrubber that has been sat so long as it remains uncontaminated.
I think I will bin it now and put some fresh in...