Calling a flow through piston design as fail-safe, but not a diaphragm first stage is major nonsense. Most regulator design (that I can think of) have been intended to not fail in a catastrophic (air shut-off) condition, but some failures don’t always work as intended.
I can’t speak for the Calypso IV, but the Scubapro Mk-5 (which is the father of all flow through piston regulators) is known to have 3 failure modes were no air will make it to the second stage.
1) Some of the early swivels have been known to break off. This is not related to the flow through piston design, but it was an issue with this regulator. The swivel bolt material was changed.
2) The piston knife edge has impaled into the soft seat and pulled the seat out with it. It totally blocked the flow of air. Scubapro redesigned the seat and I don’t think there were ever any major accidents, but as far as I know this actually occurred a few times.
3) If the main spring breaks, the piston is capable of closing and there is nothing there to open it.
A balanced piston regulator (just like a balanced diaphragm) has no biased air pressure that will open the valve (or minimal bias, depending on the precision of the design). In the closed position, the term up-stream or down-steam is actually meaningless.
Only when the valves are open the balance is offset, but not by much and both cases the air pressure on the face of the seat has a tendency to keep the valve open.
There is no pressure trying to close a balanced diaphragm first stage seat since the seat moves inside the low pressure inside the balancing chamber (As opposed to a non-balanced diaphragm first stage).
I wouldn’t doubt that there has been a Conshelf (or similar) that could have failed in a closed position, but the chances are extremely unlikely (unless there was human error in the assembly). It would also take a major error to screw it up. The assumption presented in the article about the Conshelf is total nonsense…
I honestly cannot come up with any reason (theoretical, actual reports, or even anecdotal) to suggest that a balanced piston is less likely to close shut versus a balanced diaphragm, based just on this design principle (as opposed to a particular design flaw of a particular unit. And, unless I am missing something, the track record and history of a Conshelf will tell you that there were no design flaws on its basic mechanism… there have been improvements on seat material, but that just increased reliability.
Warning, don’t do this at home!!!
If you take a Scubapro Mk-5 first stage apart. It is possible to remove the piston spring and push the piston against the seat and open the tank valve. Since the piston is balanced, the air pressure is not trying to open the valve. As I mentioned, the up-stream biased does not apply when the first stage valve is closed.
Note: if there is a small leak on the piston knife edge, the air pressure will only then push the piston out. If this happens the piston will shoot like a bullet. I repeat… do not try this at home!!!
The major issue with an up-stream second stage is that they are not balanced and any increase in IP will tend to push the valve closed. They are not designed to handle the full tank pressure (like the up-stream valve in a Mistral) and if the first stage leaks it will shut off the air flow and the LP hose could burst with the higher pressure.
It is worth noticing that almost all pressure reducing regulators used in all industrial gas applications are non-balanced diaphragm regulators. Think of all the oxygen regulators use for welding. I don’t think they are ever serviced and some of the applications take these types of regulators into very hostile environments.
The first dive shop where I worked in 1971 was a Scubapro shop. I find it funny that the owner never tried to pull this story of a “fail-safe” flow through piston design. He surely made up every other BS story you could imagine (and few you wouldn’t even think of). But, he missed this one.
It was very entertaining working at that dive shop. There were many times that it was hard to keep a straight face, and then there were scary times when he started believing his own lies…
