I have a Ninja 3000 PSI, 48 cu in aluminum HPA tank that is about a year out of hydro. Testing this costs within a few bucks of buying a new tank, and in the past that is exactly what I have done, replacing and recycling the old tank. Recently I've had some second thoughts. I now have two of these in hydro, one within two years out.
First, my usage and condition. I use my marker and these tanks to scare away deer, raccoons, and the occasional squirrel clever enough to pillage our bird feeders. I rotate these tanks, charge them up, use the air, go to the next tank, charge them, etc. They are charged maybe 4 times a year (sometimes maybe once). The tanks live indoors, and every one of them looks brand new. None have been ever dropped, the paint shows no chips, scratches, or dings. I took the new tanks to a scuba shop, the guy scrutinized the stampings, determined the tanks were able to be pressurized and filled them. I've taken my tanks to a local paint ball field, the kids grab the tank, fill it and take my cash. Since they charge by the 1000psi and rarely look at the gage, I've started to tell them what I need ("2500psi, please, or this tank only needs 1000 to top it up") so I don't pay for air I don't get. Do they look at the stamping on the tank at all? You have to be kidding. I've seen guys with ratty old tanks (in or out of hydro is unknown) get air at this field.
From a metallurgical point of view, metal fatigues with repetitive stress. My tanks clearly receive very very few pressurizations compared to say those rental scuba tanks at the dive shop. None of my tanks have been charged w/ air more than a couple of dozen times over their hydro lifetime. I have no idea what time does to the strength of the tank - we are supposed to junk them after 15 years.
How often has anyone here heard of a tank exploding?
Are you religious in getting your tanks hydro-ed when they expire? Do you junk them at 15 years?
First, my usage and condition. I use my marker and these tanks to scare away deer, raccoons, and the occasional squirrel clever enough to pillage our bird feeders. I rotate these tanks, charge them up, use the air, go to the next tank, charge them, etc. They are charged maybe 4 times a year (sometimes maybe once). The tanks live indoors, and every one of them looks brand new. None have been ever dropped, the paint shows no chips, scratches, or dings. I took the new tanks to a scuba shop, the guy scrutinized the stampings, determined the tanks were able to be pressurized and filled them. I've taken my tanks to a local paint ball field, the kids grab the tank, fill it and take my cash. Since they charge by the 1000psi and rarely look at the gage, I've started to tell them what I need ("2500psi, please, or this tank only needs 1000 to top it up") so I don't pay for air I don't get. Do they look at the stamping on the tank at all? You have to be kidding. I've seen guys with ratty old tanks (in or out of hydro is unknown) get air at this field.
From a metallurgical point of view, metal fatigues with repetitive stress. My tanks clearly receive very very few pressurizations compared to say those rental scuba tanks at the dive shop. None of my tanks have been charged w/ air more than a couple of dozen times over their hydro lifetime. I have no idea what time does to the strength of the tank - we are supposed to junk them after 15 years.
How often has anyone here heard of a tank exploding?
Are you religious in getting your tanks hydro-ed when they expire? Do you junk them at 15 years?
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