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Air reservoir

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#1 runedrig

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 08:08 PM

I have searched the forum for the answer so I am sorry if it has escaped me. If it has please tell me where to find it and I will negate this post. I have been interested in the idea of frostbite which dizzy made a while ago. I was wondering if you could use an air tank instead of the bladder he used in this project besides shell restriction. If not why? Any help is much appreciated this could lead to a good project.
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#2 HOTH

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 08:39 PM

I really do not mean to backseat mod, but try Pm'ing him.
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#3 runedrig

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 08:41 PM

First of all I have tried. Second its not very fair that because he came up with the bladder in frostbite he gets every question pertaining to the topic thereafter.

Edited by runedrig, 16 March 2010 - 09:00 PM.

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#4 HOTH

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 08:43 PM

First of all I have tried. Second its not very fair that because he came up with the bladder he gets every question thereafter.

Alright, not really sure what the second half of that statement meant, but whatever.
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#5 TantumBull

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 08:43 PM

Of course you could. The advantage of a bladder is that it keeps a fairly constant pressure (up to a point), as it expands as it pressurizes. With a hard tank you run into the problem of not being able to utilize anything below ~35 PSI (in normal size tanks), which means a lot of wasted pumping. You also run into the problem of too much pressure in a hard tank (you do in a bladder as well, but only after it can't stretch anymore). However hard tanks are obviously much more durable and capable of higher pressures if that's what you need.
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#6 runedrig

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 08:57 PM

But would a tank allow you to store more air and does the psi matter if you are transferring it to other tanks?
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#7 TantumBull

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 08:58 PM

Yes and yes.
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#8 runedrig

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 09:01 PM

So higher psi in the tank would mean higher psi in the at2k tank after transfer?
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#9 ChaosRaisin

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 09:17 PM

So higher psi in the tank would mean higher psi in the at2k tank after transfer?


Basically, yes.
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#10 runedrig

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Posted 16 March 2010 - 09:23 PM

Alright if that is true my questions are solved. Thank you for your time.
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