Sun Nov 28, 2010 1:24 am
I wanted to update this thread, as to not leave anyone seeking answers in the future in the dark. When I replaced the horseshoe lever with a good one sourced from a parts regulator, the green label breathes fine.
Here are some tips for getting your red, green, or early blue label with a rough cast body to breathe well (I don't know anything about the black label, as I have never seen one personally):
-Use the original springs. Tom Madere touched on this in another thread, but the relief of the spring cups on the rough cast body is deeper than on the forged bodies. Tom noticed it on his regulator, and I noticed it on both of my rough cast bodies. This means that the improved springs, which work great on a forged body, will not work in a rough body. I experienced this first hand on a rough body test dive in Ohio. Conversely, the NOS springs, which have the potential to create a terrible work of breathing on a forged body reg due to the reduction in spring cup depth, work great on the rough body. I have dived the improved springs on a forged body to depths of 120 feet.
-Crank the IP as high as you can with the reg on a tank with 300 PSI or so of supply pressure. This usually works out to about 135-140 PSI. DA series (non-aquamaster) regulators seem to like high IP to balance out the amount of force exerted by the second stage springs. If you don't have an IP gauge, then advance the first stage screw until the reg hisses at 300 PSI supply pressure. Back it off 1/8-1/4 of a turn, then mark it with a sharpie. Now you have a base IP.
-Pay lots of attention to the horseshoe. Horseshoes on the original DA series are not like the DAAM series. The angular mating surface of the DA horsehoes makes it prone to wear. Check for grooves or exposed brass. If it's not too bad, finesse it a little with a locksmith's file to smooth out the mating surface and make it less prone to vibration and poor engagement.
-The original specification for setting the second stage lever on a DA calls for the screws to be set at 1.5 turns from fully screwed in. This measurement works great on a rough cast body with stock springs. On a forged body with stock springs, you will have too much tension on the spring. Don't take my word for it, try it. I usually end up with anywhere from 2-2.5 turns out on a forged body DA with improved springs. The improved springs are the ones that Bryan sells in his kit. I surmise that the original spec for the tune was carried over from the rough cast body, along with the springs. This means that the delta is in the forged body, with its shallower springs cups.
The impossible missions are the only ones which succeed. -JYC