What can you expect when
you get your regulator serviced?
That depends. If you walk into
your local dive store and proclaim
that your trusty regulator
is free flowing, the technician’s
response will be to disassemble
your regulator, clean it, and reassemble
it, replacing the filter
and all the soft parts (o-rings
and seats). These are the parts
that typically come in an annual
service kit. If instead you report
that your regulator is stuttering
and honking, the technician’s
response will be the same. If the
complaint is “my regulator is
breathing wet,” ditto. No matter
what the problem, the response
is almost universally the same.
And there is some logic to
this — performing these steps
will generally fix the problem...
and truthfully, it is time-savvy.
Rather than spending his time
and your time and money diagnosing
the problem, he simply
fixes everything. An annual
service or overhaul can run anywhere
from $40 to $110 for the
labor plus parts. Most regulator
warranties will cover the cost of
parts, which may lift $20 to $40
from your wallet if your regulator
is not covered.
If your regulator is not misbehaving
and you don’t believe
it needs an annual service, but
you would feel better about your
upcoming dive trip if you had
it checked out before leaving,
most operations will do a bench
check or inspection for a lot less
money (some stores will even do
it free). However, ask what the
terms “bench check” and “inspection”
mean to the technician. To
a trained technician who works
in a well-equipped service center,
a “bench check” means that
the regulator is hooked up to a
diagnostic machine called a flow
bench. By pushing buttons and
twisting valves, the technician
can check the interstage sure, cracking pressure (inhalation
effort) at the second stage,
exhalation effort at the second
stage, and flow rate through the
regulator. He can watch real
gauges and give real numbers,
and he can do all of the above at
different tank pressures. He may
or may not perform the same
service when an “inspection” is
performed.
Perhaps no more than one
dive shop in 10 has a full flow
bench set up, which runs up to
$4000. However, a mechanically
adept scuba service technician
can rebuild and tune a regulator
with only a high pressure gauge
and an interstage pressure gauge.
And he can get close to the correct
numbers. He just can’t nail it
as well as service technician with
a flow bench.
Checking It Out
By way of comparison, we
took a Sea Quest regulator along with an Air II and attached
gauges to a local dive operator,
Harbor Dive Center, Sausalito,
CA, and asked them to perform
a bench check on the rig. (Note
that while the term “bench
check” was used, there was no
actual flow bench involved.) We
watched as retired owner cum
technician Jack Kuhn measured
the intermediate pressure from
the first stage to be sure it was
within manufacturer specs (generally
about 130 psi). This level
allows the regulator to breathe
easily without free flowing. It’s
also below the pressure necessary
to burst the low pressure hose
(250 to 300 psi).
Next, Kuhn repeatedly
pressed the second stage purge
button, measuring how quickly
the air flow rebounded from a
purge (or breath) to a consistent
“lock pressure.” A slow rebound
or a tendency for the interstage
pressure to creep up past the
lock pressure would indicate a
need for full service.
Next, he checked the filter
for salt or corrosion, which he
said is a clue to conditions inside
the first stage as well. Then he
checked the low pressure valve
seat components. Finally, both
stages and all hoses were submerged
to double check for
leaks, especially in the high pressure
swivel of the submersible
pressure gauge.
Harbor Dive Center charged
$15 to conduct these tests and
make necessary adjustments to
the regulator (the Air II didn’t
require any service). They
replace parts only as needed. If
our rig had needed a full overhaul,
the charge would be $75
plus parts for both first and second
stages plus an alternative air
source.
Full Service
For a full annual service, we
turned to AirTech, in Raleigh,
NC. They claim on their website
that they employ factory-authorized
technicians for every major
brand of dive gear in the U.S.
and honor manufacturers’ partsprovision
warranties with proof
the warranty is current. They service
dive gear for some 40 retailers
around the country as well as
for consumers who send equipment
directly.
Because we could not
observe our regulator inspection
first-hand and because AirTech’s
website boldly states, “we are fearlessly
unafraid of offering advice.
Don’t hesitate to call if you want
some,” we called their toll-free
number.
Question: The Air II being
sent to you is old and has been
driven hard. Is that a problem?
Answer: We once received
a regulator that had been run
over by a car. The second stage housing was in pieces, but the
valving mechanism was intact, so
the innovative owner had simply
wrapped it in duct tape (leaving
access to the purge and the
exhaust ports open) and continued
to dive. He just sent it to us
for annual service. We fixed it for
him. One regulator we got in was
so coated with chewing tobacco
people in the next room were
asking about the smell. We managed
that as well. Your old Air II
will not be a problem.
Question: When a regulator
fails on a dive, a common comment
is “I just had it serviced!” If
you service my regulator and it
fails on my first dive, then what?
Answer: If you didn’t damage
it, then the problem is probably
with our service or a defect in a
new part we installed. As far as
service goes, it would be nice to
be absolutely infallible, but we
aren’t. In recognition of this,
serviced regulators are subject
to careful redundant testing
and inspection prior to being
returned.
Regarding parts defects:
every now and then, we receive
a batch of flawed replacement
parts. It rarely happens, but it
does happen. These parts can
perform well enough initially to
escape detection but fail soon
after. So we offer an unconditional
service guarantee: if any
regulator we service fails within
a year, we will refund all money
the customer paid for service
and for whatever reasonable
expenses they incurred to rent,
repair, or replace their regulator
while on their dive trip. We only
ask for a chance to inspect the
regulator, if possible, so we can
identify the problem as a service
error or flawed part (we notify
the manufacturer). In 2004, we
serviced nearly 1,200 regulators
and received reports of problems
on five.
It’s On Its Way
After stating that neither was
under warranty, we anonymously
mailed AirTech a Scubapro regulator
and an Air II without the gauge
console. We taped over the open
port to keep out foreign matter.
Dear Editor:
I have a couple of comments on your Servicing Your
Regulator article in the March issue.
1. I’ve been a victim of “just-had-the-regulator-serviced”
free-flow. So have my buddies, including one just yesterday. My
theory is that the seats take a little time to take a set, so the
regulator needs to be readjusted after a couple of weeks. So it’s
best to leave it sit at the shop for a week or two, then pick it up
and test it before leaving the shop.
2. The Atomic regulators require service every two years
because of a design feature: there’s no load on the seats until
the tank is turned on. It’s new engineering, not new marketing,
not new policy. — Chuck Tribolet (Morgan Hill, CA)
*******
Excellent point. Newly installed seats do take time to set.
Pete Wolfinger at Peter Built, which makes specialty tools for
dive service, estimates that it takes as many as 250 cycles (either
breaths or purge button pushes) to achieve an 80% set between
the mating surfaces on both low-pressure and high-pressure
seats. He sells a machine that basically will purge a regulator
45 times per minute, thus achieving the required 250 cycles
in around 5-6 minutes of loud hissing noises. It’s unlikely that
many service shops use one of Pete’s machines, though some
technicians will basically cycle the regulator 60-80 times while
adjusting the ISP and cracking effort, which should help some.
However, leaving the regulator in the shop for a week or
two probably doesn’t help. First stages are designed so that the
high-pressure valve stays open when the regulator is not pressurized:
no cycling, no set. One idea might be to immediately
hook your newly serviced regulator up to a tank, and hit the
purge button around 250 times, and then see if it free-flows...
If it does, have it readjusted. If it doesn’t... go diving.
Atomic regulators do have an “open seat” design; so does
Scubapro. But it’s still the same with every regulator: the first
stage high-pressure seat is open until pressurized. With most
manufacturers, the second stage seat is closed, but regulator
manufacturers like Scubapro and Atomic have a balanced design
that keeps the second stage seat open until pressurized. Back in
the days of old, Dacor, SP, Sherwood, and USD used to have little
mechanical devices like depressors and pins attached to or built
into the second stages so the owner could manually block the
second stage valve from closing when he stored the regulator. |
We took AirTech’s guaranteed
10-day service turnaround
at $23 per stage, plus parts. We
could have paid $5 more per
stage for a three-day rush job or
even $10 per stage for a 24-hour
turnaround time. They got the
gear back to us within a week.
The returned packaged included
the old parts in a plastic bag, so
we could see which parts were
replaced. They even installed a
plug in the pressure port to protect
it.
AirTech’s total labor charge
was $69. They found a pinhole
in the Air II’s mouthpiece and
replaced it with a new one along
with a new housing, body valve,
and button exhaust. Total parts
cost for both was $82.96, of which
$45.13 was for the Air II’s nonstandard
replacement parts.
Who Gets the Job?
If you know your local dive
store and/or technician, there’s
a lot to be said for the face-toface
contact of dealing with
someone you know personally.
He may even let you watch as he
runs your equipment through
the tests. If no dive operator is
conveniently located near you or
if your local dive store doesn’t
service the type of regulator
you own, shipping to an operation
such as AirTech’s is a good
option. In both cases, our experiences
excelled. Our happy ending,
a couple weeks later, was taking
both regulators to Cozumel,
where we used them on steel 120
and 95-cu. ft. tanks filled to 3,000
psi. They performed flawlessly on
dives as deep as 127 feet.
If you visit AirTech’s website,
make sure and check out their
“Observations” page — it’s pretty
entertaining (www.airtechscubaservices.com). The site contains
complete shipping instructions
and other questions can
be answered via a toll-free call
to 866-287-0850 or by e-mail to
info@airtechscubaservices.com.