Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 20

Thread: Divers bottle/air rife filling

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2017
    Location
    Newbury
    Posts
    178

    Divers bottle/air rife filling

    1st Just had bottle filled at Ocean Turtle Diving Basingstoke Great place filled in minutes £5.00 Nice and cheap, NOW my question is this got home and a friend of mine said he has a large compressor which i could use if I wished is this feasible? or not can anyone tell me? Many Thanks in advance.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2013
    Location
    abingdon
    Posts
    1,590
    Quote Originally Posted by Gerard c. View Post
    1st Just had bottle filled at Ocean Turtle Diving Basingstoke Great place filled in minutes £5.00 Nice and cheap, NOW my question is this got home and a friend of mine said he has a large compressor which i could use if I wished is this feasible? or not can anyone tell me? Many Thanks in advance.
    hello, not unless it is one designed and made for PCP air rifle filling, or for filling Dive bottles

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Ashford
    Posts
    1,222
    A normal air compressor (as used in workshops and construction) will charge to 8 bar with rather dirty air. Not going to do much for a 230 / 300 bar cylinder that needs clean dry air.
    few people outside the sport seem to understand the immense pressure needed by a PCP.

    Stick to dive shops, £5 is a good deal, rip-off merchants near me slapped a £20 surcharge on my last fill for some spurious BS reason to do with it being a surface cylinder and requiring extra cooling/special handling / rarefied mountain air /chicken sacrifice to keep the dive god happy.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    New Milton, Hampshire
    Posts
    14,389
    Quote Originally Posted by Solvo View Post

    Stick to dive shops, £5 is a good deal, rip-off merchants near me slapped a £20 surcharge on my last fill for some spurious BS reason to do with it being a surface cylinder and requiring extra cooling/special handling / rarefied mountain air /chicken sacrifice to keep the dive god happy.

    Are you sure that wasn't a visual inspection?

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Yeovil/Moreton in Marsh
    Posts
    12,907
    Scuba tanks - surface air or otherwise, need a high pressure and they need filtered systems better than found on commercial plant.

    The air is not Dry - but a lot of the moisture is removed. Humans are generally breathing this and need some moisture otherwise the throat would dry and they would dehydrate. Even snorkelling leaves your throat bone dry and that's normal air with water evaporating all around.

    This is specialist kit needing regular servicing and probably engineer inspection to comply with safety and legislation/insurance conditions.

    In the same way I would never use a stirrup pump to fill my gun, I would not use anything other than a proper dive compressor to fill my tanks
    In a battle of wits I refuse to engage with an unarmed person.
    To one shot one kill, you need to seek the S. Kill only comes from Skill

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Ashford
    Posts
    1,222
    Quote Originally Posted by RobF View Post
    Are you sure that wasn't a visual inspection?
    Oh yes. £7.50 for the fill, and a £20 surcharge for it being a surface cylinder which "has special filling requirements" wont be going back there again.
    Nothing wrong with the cylinder, it was about 3 months old from BestFittings.
    Was about to spend on a new Leatherman while i was in the shop but needless to say didn't.

    Stick to the quality £5 fills.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    New Milton, Hampshire
    Posts
    14,389
    Quote Originally Posted by Solvo View Post
    Oh yes. £7.50 for the fill, and a £20 surcharge for it being a surface cylinder which "has special filling requirements" wont be going back there again.
    Nothing wrong with the cylinder, it was about 3 months old from BestFittings.
    Was about to spend on a new Leatherman while i was in the shop but needless to say didn't.

    Stick to the quality £5 fills.
    Definitely sounds like one to avoid!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Exeter
    Posts
    35,769
    Quote Originally Posted by Solvo View Post
    Oh yes. £7.50 for the fill, and a £20 surcharge for it being a surface cylinder which "has special filling requirements" wont be going back there again.
    Nothing wrong with the cylinder, it was about 3 months old from BestFittings.
    Was about to spend on a new Leatherman while i was in the shop but needless to say didn't.

    Stick to the quality £5 fills.
    What exact details did they give when you told them they were talking utter arse water ?

    As with incorrect info given at Post Offices, if you & I don't challenge it, we only have ourselves to blame.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    Newport (Shropshire)
    Posts
    628
    Quote Originally Posted by RobF View Post
    Definitely sounds like one to avoid!
    Name and shame so no one else gets caught out, think i would have asked where this information comes from.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Mar 2017
    Location
    Newbury
    Posts
    178
    Quote Originally Posted by Steyr View Post
    Scuba tanks - surface air or otherwise, need a high pressure and they need filtered systems better than found on commercial plant.

    The air is not Dry - but a lot of the moisture is removed. Humans are generally breathing this and need some moisture otherwise the throat would dry and they would dehydrate. Even snorkelling leaves your throat bone dry and that's normal air with water evaporating all around.

    This is specialist kit needing regular servicing and probably engineer inspection to comply with safety and legislation/insurance conditions.

    In the same way I would never use a stirrup pump to fill my gun, I would not use anything other than a proper dive compressor to fill my tanks
    Thanks steyr got stirrup pump but never used as worried about the rifle and looking after it. ok I only have an air arms s200 but its all I could afford and I must look after It

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Mar 2017
    Location
    Newbury
    Posts
    178
    Quote Originally Posted by Solvo View Post
    A normal air compressor (as used in workshops and construction) will charge to 8 bar with rather dirty air. Not going to do much for a 230 / 300 bar cylinder that needs clean dry air.
    few people outside the sport seem to understand the immense pressure needed by a PCP.

    Stick to dive shops, £5 is a good deal, rip-off merchants near me slapped a £20 surcharge on my last fill for some spurious BS reason to do with it being a surface cylinder and requiring extra cooling/special handling / rarefied mountain air /chicken sacrifice to keep the dive god happy.
    Yep they are ok down to earth people thats what I thought and have told game keeper,

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    bungay
    Posts
    232
    Some dive shops can be fussy we have our cylinders tested at flame skill to British standards fully certified but the local dive centre won't fill them because the date stamp has not got a fish stamped they say it's not valid
    It's a joke as they test the bottles for offshore and breathing apparatus for fire fighting

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    New Milton, Hampshire
    Posts
    14,389
    Fish stamp?

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    leicester
    Posts
    1,554
    The fish stamp is in the outline of a fish with the IDEST testing station number centred in it , When iwas testing cylinders at MDE it was IX (9).

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    New Milton, Hampshire
    Posts
    14,389
    Quote Originally Posted by acmsarh View Post
    The fish stamp is in the outline of a fish with the IDEST testing station number centred in it , When iwas testing cylinders at MDE it was IX (9).
    Ta. Never noticed that. Will have a look at mine.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •