Yeah. That's a DIN valve. Gotta have them in hydro if you want to be able to have them filled. If you fill. Yeah. No problem.Carbon fiber Scott 45View attachment 590405
All my tanks are used scott scba tanks. One has a current certification the others are all expired. I remove the valves and replace them with a pcp valve. Scott tanks have a 7/8-14 thread. I would assume all usa made tanks have the same threadCarbon fiber Scott 45View attachment 590405
Did you know you don't have to remove the spring if you just tighten the nut in the center of the valve knob all the way down? It compresses the spring past the safety lock feature. All 4 of my tanks are Scotts (15, 30, 45 & 60 minute). Valves are very simple & robust & cheap to replace if needed.I also use an expired Scott airpak, 45 minute, which I fill with my YH. I use the stock valve but I took the spring out of the stock knob so there is no impediment to rotation of the valve. I ended up buying a somewhat expensive fill set from Air Tanks Plus which works great. But I wonder sometimes if getting a Chinese bottle that comes with a fill set might not be a cheaper way to go. I suspect the Scott bottle is better made, however.
CGA347, NOT a DIN!Yeah. That's a DIN valve. Gotta have them in hydro if you want to be able to have them filled. If you fill. Yeah. No problem.
Thank you for honoring me with you exclamatory correction.CGA347, NOT a DIN!
Did you mean tanks, as opposed to valves?The Standard Scott valves (not quick connect but threaded) require a CGA347 fill adapter, not a DIN.
No, I did mean that the standard valve on a Scott tank needs a CGA347 adapter.Did you mean tanks, as opposed to valves?
I'm assuming your reply to me was meant to be humorous. Only reason for my exclamation point was so OP didn't follow incorrect information, not to "punish"Thank you for honoring me with you exclamatory correction.
Boy am i so wrong. Punish me gerry. Report me too!
Cga 347
View attachment 590525
What's this. This the one with resolution good enough to see?View attachment 590526
No, I did mean that the standard valve on a Scott tank needs a CGA347 adapter.
I'm assuming your reply to me was meant to be humorous. Only reason for my exclamation point was so OP didn't follow incorrect information, not to "punish"
you. I'm not your Daddy. Just seen too many times when people unfamiliar with equipment were sent down the wrong road. The picture you show is a DIN HOWEVER it's not a STANDARD Scott valve like the OP was showing. Get it?
I assumed most bottles 300/310b bottles had a din300 or the 7/8-14 "stub" which would then have a secondary valve and din300 or adapter to 8mil foster. I had no idea that was called cga347.No, I did mean that the standard valve on a Scott tank needs a CGA347 adapter.
I'm assuming your reply to me was meant to be humorous. Only reason for my exclamation point was so OP didn't follow incorrect information, not to "punish"
you. I'm not your Daddy. Just seen too many times when people unfamiliar with equipment were sent down the wrong road. The picture you show is a DIN HOWEVER it's not a STANDARD Scott valve like the OP was showing. Get it?
CGA347 was on most SCBA tanks as fire authorities were trying to standardize fittings for firefighting equipment. DIN was usually associated with diving equipment (SCUBA) but we airgunners use a bastardization of whatever we can make work for us. I like staying with scba stuff & its inherent robustness. With the cga347 no secondary valve is needed, just the tank valve & cga fill adapter for airing up. They're fairly inexpensive too.I assumed most bottles 300/310b bottles had a din300 or the 7/8-14 "stub" which would then have a secondary valve and din300 or adapter to 8mil foster. I had no idea that was called cga347.
My dräger and acecare have those little outlet stubs both lead to din 300 adapter
I have one of the direct fittings on the dräger. The acecare people.complicated it. Thanks for clarity. And yes thats my humor earlier.CGA347 was on most SCBA tanks as fire authorities were trying to standardize fittings for firefighting equipment. DIN was usually associated with diving equipment (SCUBA) but we airgunners use a bastardization of whatever we can make work for us. I like staying with scba stuff & its inherent robustness. With the cga347 no secondary valve is needed, just the tank valve & cga fill adapter for airing up. They're fairly inexpensive too.
Half of them have bad valves. They are all threaded and do not fit our newer packs. I've been full time FF for 20+. It's a good short term air source while I gear up.The Standard Scott valves (not quick connect but threaded) require a CGA347 fill adapter, not a DIN.
I've never heard of that before. I'll be trying that out soon. What valve would you recommend for a replacement?Did you know you don't have to remove the spring if you just tighten the nut in the center of the valve knob all the way down? It compresses the spring past the safety lock feature. All 4 of my tanks are Scotts (15, 30, 45 & 60 minute). Valves are very simple & robust & cheap to replace if needed.