Hi Hugh,
Yes, it's a hollow cylinder and the dimensions
are:
OD = 7"
ID = 4"
L = 12"
There is a ring of closed cell foam between the top of the
Sofnolime and the bottom of the lid, to prevent development of a clear
path due to settling.
Thanks,
Alec From: owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org [mailto:owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org] On Behalf Of Hugh Fulton Sent: Sunday, August 07, 2011 6:40 PM To: personal_submersibles@psubs.org Subject: RE: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Snoopy life support test Hi
Alec, Is
your scrubber hollow ? ie. Does it have another tube inside with the
sofnolime around the outside? If
it is totally full then I would suggest that you would need the extra grunt of
the centrifugal fan. What
are its dimensions? I note that Phil’s scrubbers have a channel so that
the air never has to travel more than about 3-4 inches through the ‘lime and has
a large surface area. IF yours has a hollow inner gauze tube then you
would have the same effect. I
cannot help but think that Phil is only using a small computer fan but has very
good performance. Chs, Hugh From:
owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org
[mailto:owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org] On Behalf Of Smyth,
Alec Hi
everyone, OK,
let's try to answer some of all these questions. First, my daughter is twelve
but she's extremely tall for a twelve year old, being already the same
height as her mother. She would still be on the light side for an
adult, but she's definitely more than half an adult. If I were diving with
a crewmember of about my size, my guess (and that is all it is) initial O2
setting would be 1.25 lpm instead of the 1 lpm used in the test with my
daughter. I agree
the initial concentrations of CO2 are high, and I think they are
due to the time taken up by getting into position and dogging down the hatch. I
was working in the sub up to about ten minutes before the first test, so there
was probably some lingering CO2 from my earlier presence too. The getting-ready
process was probably about 4 minutes, the last minute or so
being with the hatch closed. Just to make sure the instrument is not
reading high, I tested it outside and it reads 0.02% CO2 and 20.2% O2.
In terms
of the permissible concentrations of CO2, the air at the end of the
unassisted dive did not yet feel at all stale. We were at 1.6% CO2.
But according to Phil's life support white paper, the Navy's standard for manned
submersibles is to keep CO2 under 2.5%, while NASA's standard is
1% for indefinite exposure and 3% for up to one hour. I could not tell any
difference in air quality between the three dives, other than by looking at the
instruments. Yes, my
O2 meter did track the Sub Aspida readings, which is reassuring for when I ship
the latter back to Jon! Problem is, mine has one percent discrimination
while the Sub Aspida goes to a hundredth of a percent. On the unassisted
dive mine went down to 19% and then 18%, at which point its lower alarm
went off, but on the two life support dives mine didn't have the precision to
show anything meaningful at all, and was at 20% the whole time. Its functional
enough to tell you if you're in trouble, with a backlit display and
low-high alarms, but useless for a test of any accuracy. By the way, with
something as accurate as the Sub Aspida you have to be a bit careful in the
measurements. If you aim a breath in its direction, the reading shoots way up.
If you raise it into the dome, it shoots way up. Just walking from outside into
my home, the CO2 increases by 300%. Regarding
the radial fan current versus battery capacity, I've a new bit of information.
Yesterday I noticed that the fan's spec sheet lists the current draw as 0.22
amps, while the fan has 0.36 amps printed on it. Given the conflicting
figures, I put down the higher one. But Cliff's email prompted me to
go out and measure the current draw to settle the matter. It turns out the
fan pulls only 0.2 amps with the scrubber full, so I guess the spec was
right and the motor sticker wrong. Another detail here is that Snoopy, being a
little K250, is a 12 volt boat with a single battery bank. The
original K250 design has three batteries wired in parallel. In the
recent redesign I was able to expand that with a fourth battery for a
total of 316 amp hours, but I still have the original single-bank
configuration. Of course, without a separate hotel battery, my reserve
for the fan will depend on the battery charge condition. If
anyone wants the specifics, the radial fan is a Delta Electronics model
BFB0712H. Here are some photos attached of scrubber and
fan. Final
point... I was not surprised by the fan results. What really did surprise me was
the stability of the cabin pressure, in particular in view of the precision to
which the Sub Aspida was measuring it (1 millibar), and how easy it was to use a
system with no feedback loop regulating the flow. I wonder if that is typical or
lucky? Thanks,
The
contents of this e-mail are intended for the named addressee only. It contains
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it. From:
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[mailto:owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org] On Behalf Of Jon
Wallace The CO2 readings are
definitely high, especially in the test without life support. I know that
when I used the monitor out in the open the CO2 percentage was between .01 and
.03 so I don't expect a calibration error is the cause of the high readings
unless something happened to the device during shipment. That should be
easy enough for Alec to test however by simply going to an open area and
checking the CO2 reading. Alec,
thanks for posting the life support test for Snoopy. I quite enjoyed
seeing actual test data. Your results of axial vs. radial fans mirrored my
results and my conclusions were the same; i.e., radial fans are the way to
go. Have you done any test or calcs to see how long a 0.36 amp current
load will take to burn your backup batteries? My guess is that at this
current, you would not make 72 hours. IF they don you may have to find a
radial fan that draws less current.
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