YankDownUnder wrote:There is no doubt that Gagnan made many interesting design inovations. It is also interesting to see how the same problems were handled differently in different places. The J valve of Gagnan's was used in Europe and the USA, while Australians inverted their tanks and decanted for more positive air management. Gagnan put the reserve on the tank, while Ted Eldred put it on the reduction valve as early as 1952. The Australians initially imported IWK tanks to replace surplus aircraft tanks. The high pressure IWKs were expensive, and when used as twins, could not compete with the steel 72, but pressure gauges became a must, as a reserve was only suitable as a back up for unmanaged air. The savings on the new tanks caused a cost when the gauge was added. However, mass production and mass appeal won out in the end. Australians fell victim to the slick advertisements which crossed the big pond.
series, the Porpoise, the Scubmatic, the Dawson and the Sea Bee with superior breathing. L'Air Liquide appeared so threatened by the Porpoise that they forced the sale of Breathing Appliances in 1960, and attempted to supress the design. The Royal Australian Navy contract kept it alive for more than a decade. Ted Eldred told me he sold his first CA early in 1952. Over 12,000 were produced. I have the last Porpoise sold. I bought it in 1977. My Porpoise CA-1 and CA-2 are dated 1953 and have venturi jets. The demand valves were never changed throughout the life of the marque. The massive venturi had to be advertised as something the diver should not be afraid of. The flow was so great that trying it in a store scared off some customers.
While not the first, Jim Ager has made the single hose regulator longer than in other manufacturer in the world. He started production of the Sea Bee in 1954 and still comes to work each day. He told me a few weeks ago, that he only changed to the down stream configuration because the "politically correct" pressures from commercial cerification companies like PADI. Instuctors told students they weren't safe. His Sea Bee has never had a failure in either configuration and is prefered by commercial divers here, since the disappearance of Porpoise.
I must admit I have not dived any of these units beyond 200 feet. I began diving them in 1959, and I have never seen a problem with the tilt valves. My Heinke MkIII still breathes better than any of my Royal Mistrals and there is nothing to adjust or to 'tune'.
Dear YDU:
Great to see that there are hosers that are huge fans of their 'homies' - just as I am of mine!
The 'Porpoise' total sales of 12,000 is quite an impressive number - relative to the population of Australia. Seems as though a lot of the Oz systems were heavily influenced by various models of the 'EssGee' (Seibe Gorman's under-license version of the Spiro CG45) but certainly some were unique. As a point of interest, the top two hose regulator production numbers for the Aire Liquide/Spiro plant and their international licensees (SG/USD/A-L Nihon/etc.,) were in the late 60's and are reported to have exceeded 10,000 units per month!
I was interested in your comments about the tilt valve regs - we ran a lot of breathing machine tests of early upstreamers (Rose Aviation/ Waterlung A/Scott/etc.) that seemed to correspond closely with field experience - that is, the tilt valves had low cracking pressures and easy breathing in shallow water but by their design limitations tended to bottom out during heavy exertion at any significant depth. There seems to be little controversy about the ultimate breather - for both low cracking and LPM flow rate - being the combined downstream valve/ venturi assist.
i.e. a properly set up RAM or Trieste or other similar regs.
(A 'sleeper' used for deep water was the long lever Normalair(Yeovill, U.K) tilt valve single stage set - when combined with a first stage reducer!)
Discussions of fave reg designs could go on indefinitely - but gas physics are the same the world over - orifices are holes that go sonic at accurately predictable differential pressures- flow rates and cracking pressures are accurately measurable- and so on.
Still and all, always nice to see somebody fervently rooting for their local team - particularly if they are a transplant to the area!
Phil