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#1
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Am wondering if anyone has set up a small air compressor rig, 110V,
similar to the ones used by divers for hull cleaning services. I assume just a small oil-less compressor and couple it directly to a stock dive regulator? I only need it dockside in a marina with 30A seervice. THANKS for any input |
#2
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NO!!! You can not use a standard compressor for breathable air. At the very
least you must filter the air and run an oil separator. There is a reason a dive compressor such as a Hooka cost as much as they do. The air that is delivered is going into your lungs! If your marina has enough call for a diver why not hire one. A properly equipped diver will have greater versatility than a Hooka diver. Even for the very occasional need a local diver would probably love an excuse to go diving while earning a buck or two. John "BajaJim" wrote in message oups.com... Am wondering if anyone has set up a small air compressor rig, 110V, similar to the ones used by divers for hull cleaning services. I assume just a small oil-less compressor and couple it directly to a stock dive regulator? I only need it dockside in a marina with 30A seervice. THANKS for any input |
#3
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I once had a diaphragm compressor which produced air that was oil free. I
don't remember the CFM (it ran an air brush), but why would such a device be harmful? Roger http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm "John Cassara" wrote in message ... NO!!! You can not use a standard compressor for breathable air. At the very least you must filter the air and run an oil separator. There is a reason a dive compressor such as a Hooka cost as much as they do. The air that is delivered is going into your lungs! If your marina has enough call for a diver why not hire one. A properly equipped diver will have greater versatility than a Hooka diver. Even for the very occasional need a local diver would probably love an excuse to go diving while earning a buck or two. John "BajaJim" wrote in message oups.com... Am wondering if anyone has set up a small air compressor rig, 110V, similar to the ones used by divers for hull cleaning services. I assume just a small oil-less compressor and couple it directly to a stock dive regulator? I only need it dockside in a marina with 30A seervice. THANKS for any input |
#4
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The air delivered must be oil free to USP standards. Even the slightest
trace of oil can cause respiratory problems. The other problem is with the regulators. A scuba regulators 1st stage will cut the tank pressure down to about 115 psi to 500 psi depending upon brand. the 2nd stage the reduces the pressure to a few psi over ambient pressure. With each 33 feet of depth the ambient pressure increases by 1 atmosphere. The typical craftsman air compressor will be marginal in its ability to deliver air to a surface diver and inadequate in delivery to a diver at any depth. If you eliminate the first stage and just deliver air to the second stage you will overcome the high pressure problem but will have a poor performing regulator from an inconsistent delivery pressure. A scuba set-up the best way to go. It's simpler and more reliable. You will need all the other equipment any way, Wet Suit, Buoyancy device, Weight belt, Mask and maybe fins or rock boots. You will have an easier time working un-tethered and will be safer, less likely to become entangled. John "derbyrm" wrote in message news:I5T1g.935391$xm3.618358@attbi_s21... I once had a diaphragm compressor which produced air that was oil free. I don't remember the CFM (it ran an air brush), but why would such a device be harmful? Roger http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm "John Cassara" wrote in message ... NO!!! You can not use a standard compressor for breathable air. At the very least you must filter the air and run an oil separator. There is a reason a dive compressor such as a Hooka cost as much as they do. The air that is delivered is going into your lungs! If your marina has enough call for a diver why not hire one. A properly equipped diver will have greater versatility than a Hooka diver. Even for the very occasional need a local diver would probably love an excuse to go diving while earning a buck or two. John "BajaJim" wrote in message oups.com... Am wondering if anyone has set up a small air compressor rig, 110V, similar to the ones used by divers for hull cleaning services. I assume just a small oil-less compressor and couple it directly to a stock dive regulator? I only need it dockside in a marina with 30A seervice. THANKS for any input |
#5
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![]() John Cassara wrote: A scuba set-up the best way to go. It's simpler and more reliable. You will need all the other equipment any way, Wet Suit, Buoyancy device, Weight belt, Mask and maybe fins or rock boots. You will have an easier time working un-tethered and will be safer, less likely to become entangled. John A real diver don't need all that Mickey Mouse stuff! |
#6
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![]() "Bob" wrote in message oups.com... John Cassara wrote: A scuba set-up the best way to go. It's simpler and more reliable. You will need all the other equipment any way, Wet Suit, Buoyancy device, Weight belt, Mask and maybe fins or rock boots. You will have an easier time working un-tethered and will be safer, less likely to become entangled. John A real diver don't need all that Mickey Mouse stuff! Mickey Mouse ? |
#7
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BajaJim writes:
Am wondering if anyone has set up a small air compressor rig, 110V, similar to the ones used by divers for hull cleaning services. I assume just a small oil-less compressor and couple it directly to a stock dive regulator? Yes, we do this in our swimming pool. I run an old ScubaPro regulator 2nd stage ($25 on eBay) off 90 psig shop air from a standard piston/oil type compressor. Despite all the dire warnings (from people just reciting paranoia they've heard, who've never tested for oil or tried it), the air should be OK if your compressor doesn't consume oil such as from bad piston rings. And the pressure is fine for feeding a 2nd stage. The fear of "any oil in air will harm you" is silly. First, it is mineral oil, which is non-toxic. Second, if were that bad, a whiff of 2-cycle exhaust would kill you. I run this compressor for hours and hours, thousands of cubic feet, and it loses only tiny amounts of oil, most of which condenses in the tank. I suppose an oilless compressor would eliminate even the possibility of entrained oil. Although they're hideously noisy. You would want at least a 2 cfm compressor rating, since you typically breathe about 1 cfm. But 2 cfm at 90 psi is only about a 1/2 (true) horsepower unit. But see my essay http://www.truetex.com/aircompressors.htm on horsepower ratings. You need an adapter from the SAE scuba fitting to NPT pipe thread and thence to a shop air quick-connect, which all then goes on your regulator second stage hose where it would have connected to a first stage. You now have a scuba regulator that terminates in an air tool quick-connect. I made my own threaded adapter on my machine shop lathe. The only source for such a part otherwise that I can think of is the adapters made for buoyancy compensator connectors to shop air for filling tires or running tools from scuba tanks (although this is the opposite direction of adaptation, it might have the critical SAE-fitting-thread to NPT-pipe-thread conversion). You could do it by simply splicing hoses with a hose barb if you were willing to cut up the regulator feed hose. Here is my drawing of the adapter essentials: http://www.truetex.com/scuba_lp.pdf Shallow water hookah diving is easier than most open water scuba diving. The dive gear industry makes everything but this year's model sound like it's going to kill you. The old 2nd stage regulators were very simple and easy to repair yourself. They too were once the thing you had to have and all the old models would kill you. If anyone wonders if this is unreliable and therefore hazardous, I would only use it for shallow diving, like working or practicing diving in a swimming pool, or working on a boat hull, and I would insist on having a trustworthy person for a topside tender. Being suddenly out of air is not a problem with some simple training; we as tenders routinely disconnect the air unexpectedly to our diving family members to help them practice the drill (a habit I got from my first scuba instructor in the 1970s, who liked to turn off your main valve when you weren't expecting it). To anyone suggesting you just go full scuba instead of improvising a topside compressor, I would say that full scuba is absurdly cumbersome and expensive compared to hookah for shallow diving on a fixed location, and in my opinion, no improvement in risk. Of course this is diving, which takes training and recent diving experience to minimize risks. |
#8
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Most marina divers I've known just use a dive tank with a long hose. Chock
the tank securely on the dock so you don't pull it down on yourself, and away you go. Tom Dacon "BajaJim" wrote in message oups.com... Am wondering if anyone has set up a small air compressor rig, 110V, similar to the ones used by divers for hull cleaning services. I assume just a small oil-less compressor and couple it directly to a stock dive regulator? I only need it dockside in a marina with 30A seervice. THANKS for any input |
#9
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posted to rec.boats.building
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Being a compressed air addict in the shop I have installed a 12V oilless
compressor that will deliver 4CFM @90 PSI in Rutu's lazerrett. Intake is through the cockpit coaming and fiber filtered and muffled. After passing through a moisture trap at the compressor the output goes to an outlet in the cockpit so I can run some air tools or inflate dinghies or water toys. If I want to use it for breathable air I have a charcoal filter and oil coalescing filter that plug into the outlet. That is the same type arrangement I have used for years on my big shop compressor for my MSA air-line respirator when spraying LPU. The big shop compressor is an oil type so there is an additional moisture separator and coalescing filter and an extra 40 gallon settling tank in the line. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com "Richard J Kinch" wrote in message . .. BajaJim writes: Am wondering if anyone has set up a small air compressor rig, 110V, similar to the ones used by divers for hull cleaning services. I assume just a small oil-less compressor and couple it directly to a stock dive regulator? Yes, we do this in our swimming pool. I run an old ScubaPro regulator 2nd stage ($25 on eBay) off 90 psig shop air from a standard piston/oil type compressor. Despite all the dire warnings (from people just reciting paranoia they've heard, who've never tested for oil or tried it), the air should be OK if your compressor doesn't consume oil such as from bad piston rings. And the pressure is fine for feeding a 2nd stage. The fear of "any oil in air will harm you" is silly. First, it is mineral oil, which is non-toxic. Second, if were that bad, a whiff of 2-cycle exhaust would kill you. I run this compressor for hours and hours, thousands of cubic feet, and it loses only tiny amounts of oil, most of which condenses in the tank. I suppose an oilless compressor would eliminate even the possibility of entrained oil. Although they're hideously noisy. You would want at least a 2 cfm compressor rating, since you typically breathe about 1 cfm. But 2 cfm at 90 psi is only about a 1/2 (true) horsepower unit. But see my essay http://www.truetex.com/aircompressors.htm on horsepower ratings. You need an adapter from the SAE scuba fitting to NPT pipe thread and thence to a shop air quick-connect, which all then goes on your regulator second stage hose where it would have connected to a first stage. You now have a scuba regulator that terminates in an air tool quick-connect. I made my own threaded adapter on my machine shop lathe. The only source for such a part otherwise that I can think of is the adapters made for buoyancy compensator connectors to shop air for filling tires or running tools from scuba tanks (although this is the opposite direction of adaptation, it might have the critical SAE-fitting-thread to NPT-pipe-thread conversion). You could do it by simply splicing hoses with a hose barb if you were willing to cut up the regulator feed hose. Here is my drawing of the adapter essentials: http://www.truetex.com/scuba_lp.pdf Shallow water hookah diving is easier than most open water scuba diving. The dive gear industry makes everything but this year's model sound like it's going to kill you. The old 2nd stage regulators were very simple and easy to repair yourself. They too were once the thing you had to have and all the old models would kill you. If anyone wonders if this is unreliable and therefore hazardous, I would only use it for shallow diving, like working or practicing diving in a swimming pool, or working on a boat hull, and I would insist on having a trustworthy person for a topside tender. Being suddenly out of air is not a problem with some simple training; we as tenders routinely disconnect the air unexpectedly to our diving family members to help them practice the drill (a habit I got from my first scuba instructor in the 1970s, who liked to turn off your main valve when you weren't expecting it). To anyone suggesting you just go full scuba instead of improvising a topside compressor, I would say that full scuba is absurdly cumbersome and expensive compared to hookah for shallow diving on a fixed location, and in my opinion, no improvement in risk. Of course this is diving, which takes training and recent diving experience to minimize risks. |
#10
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Glenn Ashmore writes:
If I want to use it for breathable air I have a charcoal filter and oil coalescing filter that plug into the outlet. That is the same type arrangement I have used for years on my big shop compressor for my MSA air-line respirator when spraying LPU. The big shop compressor is an oil type so there is an additional moisture separator and coalescing filter and an extra 40 gallon settling tank in the line. All that filtering and coalescing is just wishful thinking without (1) a refrigerated dryer ahead of the filters, and (2) a way to monitor filter condition. A "moisture separator" is kind of a lie, because raw compressed air is saturated and condensing as it moves down the line, including after the so-called "separator". The typical charcoal filter application is worse than no filter at all, because it is left in long after it is spent, being difficult to monifor and expensive to replace. False security in breathing air. |