jkaterenchuk
Member
I have these on my O2 and Dil regulator.
http://www.piranhadivemfg.com/item/Mini-Spg-Nitrox-Ready-11795
When I do my dive checklist I can confirm the amount of gas in each tank and then shut off the tank and confirm if any gas is leaking out of the system. Additionally, I can confirm the solenoid is firing by watching the O2 gauge drop in steps.
Prior to getting into the rig I can turn the tanks on and look at the gauge to confirm again the amount of gas and that the system is indeed pressurized. Once in the rig I can press the MAV's while looking at the PO2 on the handset and confirm there operation. I can also test inflation system to confirm. I can then prebreath and watch the PO2 achieve set point and then inject DIL to confirm a PO2 drop and then the solenoid reattaining setpoint. I can then manually inject O2 to achieve as close to 1.0 as possible before entering the water. Once in the water I inject O2 during surface swim and descent to 3 M. The enable DIL ADV (assuming hypoxic mix) and utilze it for the rest of the descent. As you can see there are several point in which gas availability is confirmed and checked.
I decided to remove the normal over the shoulder SPG's after diving the unit for more the 4 years and well over a thousand hours. During all these dives I have recorded on my log sheet which doubles as the checklist (on the back) what my start and end gas was. It stays relatively the same on every dive that is a more less square profile depending upon the total time. I believe in a boom scenerio that I would be able to determine which system (O2 or DIL) is the problem without needing to see the SPG. I then have many different options to utilize to get back to the surface or extend available gas if needed.
I realize others prefer to stick with the SPG available to view during the dive. I wanted to reduce the weight for travel and also the spool leaks that seem relatively common on full size SPG's and after thinking thru the options and risks felt comfortable with this setup. Additionally, I have not had any failures on the 1in SPG's that have been reported by some other divers.
John
http://www.piranhadivemfg.com/item/Mini-Spg-Nitrox-Ready-11795
When I do my dive checklist I can confirm the amount of gas in each tank and then shut off the tank and confirm if any gas is leaking out of the system. Additionally, I can confirm the solenoid is firing by watching the O2 gauge drop in steps.
Prior to getting into the rig I can turn the tanks on and look at the gauge to confirm again the amount of gas and that the system is indeed pressurized. Once in the rig I can press the MAV's while looking at the PO2 on the handset and confirm there operation. I can also test inflation system to confirm. I can then prebreath and watch the PO2 achieve set point and then inject DIL to confirm a PO2 drop and then the solenoid reattaining setpoint. I can then manually inject O2 to achieve as close to 1.0 as possible before entering the water. Once in the water I inject O2 during surface swim and descent to 3 M. The enable DIL ADV (assuming hypoxic mix) and utilze it for the rest of the descent. As you can see there are several point in which gas availability is confirmed and checked.
I decided to remove the normal over the shoulder SPG's after diving the unit for more the 4 years and well over a thousand hours. During all these dives I have recorded on my log sheet which doubles as the checklist (on the back) what my start and end gas was. It stays relatively the same on every dive that is a more less square profile depending upon the total time. I believe in a boom scenerio that I would be able to determine which system (O2 or DIL) is the problem without needing to see the SPG. I then have many different options to utilize to get back to the surface or extend available gas if needed.
I realize others prefer to stick with the SPG available to view during the dive. I wanted to reduce the weight for travel and also the spool leaks that seem relatively common on full size SPG's and after thinking thru the options and risks felt comfortable with this setup. Additionally, I have not had any failures on the 1in SPG's that have been reported by some other divers.
John
