The two dive gear manufacturers are recalling
more than 6,000 regulator first stages manufactured
in the U.S. and in Taiwan, due to reports of uncontrolled
air flow to the second stage. Oceanic is recalling
FDX-10 and CDX-5 first stages and Aeris is recalling
its AT400-type first stages.
Fault lies with a specific batch of high pressure
seats, an internal component that mechanically seals
air between the first-stage and the intermediate-pressure
second-stage. They were made with material that
can deteriorate and fail to seal, causing an uncontrollable
freeflow.
Two separate divers had malfunctioning regulators
either before or during dives, but lived to report
the problem. Simultaneously, six dealers found the
problem when testing the regulators’ pressure before
selling to customers. Ron Landon, customer service
manager for Oceanic and Aeris, said all the reports
came in within just two weeks this past November.
The recall was issued in December.
The faulty regulators were on sale between May
1 and November 15, 2006. But Oceanic’s other DX
series First Stages (CDX, DXi, DX3, DX4 and TDX5)
and Aeris’s other diaphragm-type first stages that
were serviced between May 1, 2006 and October
22, 2007 may also be affected. To see whether your
regulator is one of them, go to status pages set up by
Oceanic (www.oceanicworldwide.com/dxretrofit/oceanic)
and Aeris (www.oceanicworldwide.com/dxretrofit/aeris) and enter the regulator’s serial number. You
can also call each company’s recall helpline -- Oceanic
is (888) 636-9390 and Aeris is (888) 854-4960.