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Crank the music! It's Regulator Service Time

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  • čas přidán 14. 08. 2024
  • Beats. Regulators. Battlestar Galactica. What are my favourite albums to listen to whilst servicing regs? Glad you asked...
    MORE DATES ADDED FOR TRUK! 14-28 Nov, 2024:
    diversready.co...
    We're giving you the what, when, why, how and who of getting your regulator serviced. No, I'm not going to teach you how to service your regs through the internet. Grown ups hire professionals.
    Products used to make this video:
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    Servicing your regulator, your scuba life support equipment, is an essential duty you owe yourself. Think of it as a spa day for your scuba regulator. It's the best!
    Thanks as always for watching!
    D.S.D.O
    James
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    Though we are based in Florida, Hawaii, California, and Michigan have 100 ft and 300 ft ocean and lake underwater coral reef, shipwreck, cave diving, freediving, scuba diving, and closed circuit rebreather trips. To learn full face mask, beginner scuba diver, advanced scuba diver, tech scuba diver, cave diver you can reach out to a professional scuba diver. Everyone should get scuba diving insurance with Divers Alert Network.
    We support all types of diving that can be found at PADI, DALLMYD, Dive Talk where they talk about cave divers react, Waterline Academy and BlueWorld TV.
    We support all types of diving products, like a full face mask, fins, BCD, dive computer, regulators, closed circuit rebreather, underwater scooter, from many companies like Simply Scuba, Mares, Dive Rite, Cressi, Zeagle, Huish, Hollis, Scubapro, Shearwater, Garmin.
    Over the years we have dived the best places like South Africa, Australia Great Barrier Reef, Belize, Honduras, Palau Micronesia, Bahamas, Mexico, Bonaire to see sharks, fish, coral, sites that the National Geographics would go to. We plan to follow Tourpia, Fearless & Fun, Drew Binsky and companies like Expedia, Jetsetter and Mojo Travelers to Egypt Red Sea, Indonesia, Thailand, Galapagos, Maldives, Cozumel and Cocos Islands Costa Rica in the near future. Crank the music! It's Regulator Service Time

Komentáře • 22

  • @pablojacebal6569
    @pablojacebal6569 Před 10 měsíci +2

    thanks for the Audioslave introductions

  • @ronrogers5045
    @ronrogers5045 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I’d recommend doing a few local dives after you get your regulator back too. I’ve picked up my regulators from the shop and they were not quite right. It would have been horrible to fly those around the world and not have good working regulators.

  • @johnperanio9581
    @johnperanio9581 Před 7 měsíci

    I'm usually listening to the fire department radio ad I'm in the Firehouse servicing my OTS full face masks for our Dive Rescue Team. Sometimes have some Jimmy Buffett playing on my phone in the background. Keep up the great articles on the channel, thanks for putting it out there. Happy new year!

  • @SimonAmazingClarke
    @SimonAmazingClarke Před 10 měsíci +8

    Absolutely critical that people remember that this is life support equipment, and it's their life.

  • @NeptunesSplendorFL
    @NeptunesSplendorFL Před 10 měsíci +1

    I suggest a neutralizing agent after the reg cleaner (acid) step, then distilled water rinse

  • @arm83221
    @arm83221 Před 10 měsíci

    I know that Deep 6 offers classes to everyone to show how to service their gear. We dove Deep 6, and I service all the family regs at the recommended interval and we will do 3-4 pool/local dives before any trip to make sure it is all working.

  • @golfalpha284
    @golfalpha284 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Excellent! Now I can save all that money by servicing my regulators myself Just kidding

  • @dom-i-mod6456
    @dom-i-mod6456 Před 9 měsíci

    What can I expect from a PADI wreck speciality course, what is the next upgrade and so on. I would like to know more about it

  • @scubacro5758
    @scubacro5758 Před 10 měsíci +2

    You can service your own regulators at home, if you are doing it corectly it will not be cheep, you need a lott of tools to do so and follow service manual. Its good to be in good relationship with owner of your local dive store so he can send you on course becouse its not something that will many people do.

    • @andrews.9286
      @andrews.9286 Před 10 měsíci

      You don't know what you are talking about. The tools may only cost as much as labor on one service.

    • @scubacro5758
      @scubacro5758 Před 10 měsíci

      @@andrews.9286 I know how much tools cost, most expensive tools are untrasonic cleaner and good torque wrench, and the rest are some normal and some specialized tools, but if you are comparing price of tools with service cost its pays with time, only problem is that if you are buying service kits from apeks for example you are paying 40 - 60€ for parts for first and second stage, thats why its good to know service people that can get that for you way cheeper. And tools don't cost as labor for one service, thats just not true they are way more expensive, in my area service of 1. and 2. stage for Apeks is € 75 just torque wrench is at least € 100

    • @ciocanul
      @ciocanul Před 5 měsíci

      It's a lot of tools for someone who does not already have tools. The tools that you most likely do not have are an intermediate pressure gauge, a second stage adjustment tool and a differential pressure gauge with range of +/- 500pa. Other than that there are at least one ultrasonic bath and an assortment of wrenches, vises and picks. The other so called specialized tools can be easily machined or printed. Anyway, if you never touched a torque wrench in your life or at least serviced a carburetor, it's best to let a techie do it.

    • @scubacro5758
      @scubacro5758 Před 5 měsíci

      @@ciocanul i have everything you just said, I can service my gear its not hard. But I have seen people that can't figure out how to conect din regulator, there are a lot of people that should not touch regulators becouse they will f something. I said its expensive becouse if you on online and start buying all at once it won't be cheep (as you said).

  • @Chogogo717
    @Chogogo717 Před 10 měsíci +1

    You’ll have to start listening to Tool. Nice long songs.

  • @centrorevisioniattrezzatur6534

    AC/DC 😉

  • @tedlin4962
    @tedlin4962 Před 10 měsíci

    As a diver, is there any reason to keep the old parts from a reg service? Could they serve any purpose on boat if an issue arises? Obviously, I won’t be rebuilding anything on a boat, but maybe a diaphragm or exhaust valve?

    • @tylerjackson3325
      @tylerjackson3325 Před 10 měsíci

      I don’t keep any used parts when I service my regs. Reg techs typically give them back to you only as proof that the parts were replaced.
      First stage diaphragms should not be reused.
      Second stage diaphragms are pretty well protected and should not fail if replaced regularly and taken care of. Same with exhaust valves in my opinion.
      If you do insist on carrying them as spares I’d much prefer to bring new ones as they’ll be less brittle from age. I usually just bring a whole spare (recently serviced) second stage on a long trip rather than a whole bin of reg parts “just in case”.

    • @M3rl1n87
      @M3rl1n87 Před 10 měsíci +1

      For my xStream (Poseidon) my tech will typically give me back the old servo (if replaced) as on that reg that is something that be swapped out very easily in the field on the second stage if you absolutely needed to temporality with a used one. Otherwise all the other parts they will show me if I ask for them, but they are just a bunch of different o-rings, insert, filter and such on my reg that get tossed.

  • @codydowney9494
    @codydowney9494 Před 10 měsíci

    Great video James! Miss your previous intro music from 2 years ago!

  • @lonzoreacts1190
    @lonzoreacts1190 Před 10 měsíci

    I love your channel, keep up the good work!!!! 🤿

  • @dietrichvanderwesthuizen3307
    @dietrichvanderwesthuizen3307 Před 10 měsíci

    🌀🤿💦

  • @slicksavvy5745
    @slicksavvy5745 Před 10 měsíci +2

    God forbid you support your local dive shop