Hearing some water inside SCBA tank. Any issues?

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I dunno, once you do any of those you influence the outcome. I'd just leave it alone. Once you open it up you can no longer observe it in the state it was, think Schrödinger's Law or like Charles' Law and Boyle's Law and stuff. If there is moisture in the tank, which is what it sounds like, then it's probably better to estimate the moisture amount using the sound of moisture. If you open it up, and it has pressure, you'll never be able to effectively measure the moisture. If there is no pressure and there is moisture then that's a really odd situation as well and best to leave it alone? *shrugs*

The tank could easily have 15mL of water (as is common) or worse 15cc or even worse 15 cm^3 of water.
 
I don’t believe the diving store is going to fill that tank. Best thing to do is to have the tank reinspected. My local Fire Equipment & Service shop well able to help me with hydro and inspection for $35 even through I have my own scuba compressor to fill my tanks.

That same scuba store I was going to go to does hydro inspections, maybe I should do that. It was done in 2016, but I guess who knows what went on during those 4 years. They fill it up with water and dry it out right? I'm guessing maybe that's a good idea.

Yeah bad idea to fill it or any gun if you have water in it. If you had it hydrod sounds like something went wrong.


Last hydro was 2016

I dunno, once you do any of those you influence the outcome. I'd just leave it alone. Once you open it up you can no longer observe it in the state it was, think Schrödinger's Law or like Charles' Law and Boyle's Law and stuff. If there is moisture in the tank, which is what it sounds like, then it's probably better to estimate the moisture amount using the sound of moisture. If you open it up, and it has pressure, you'll never be able to effectively measure the moisture. If there is no pressure and there is moisture then that's a really odd situation as well and best to leave it alone? *shrugs*

The tank could easily have 15mL of water (as is common) or worse 15cc or even worse 15 cm^3 of water.

Yeah there is no pressure in the tank. I'm bad at quantifying it, but maybe its like 20-30 ml. Not sure. I think I'll just have it hydrotested early anyway to be safe. It was done 4 years ago anyway.
 
There is usually a "straw" looking thing hanging down from the valve that prevents water on the tank from getting in your gun. The downside is that you cannot purge it by turning it over.

If you have a rubber mallet it's easy enough to remove the valve and dump out the water. I had to do that on a couple used scba tanks I bought off ebay when I first went with PCPs
 
I dunno, once you do any of those you influence the outcome. I'd just leave it alone. Once you open it up you can no longer observe it in the state it was, think Schrödinger's Law or like Charles' Law and Boyle's Law and stuff. If there is moisture in the tank, which is what it sounds like, then it's probably better to estimate the moisture amount using the sound of moisture. If you open it up, and it has pressure, you'll never be able to effectively measure the moisture. If there is no pressure and there is moisture then that's a really odd situation as well and best to leave it alone? *shrugs*

The tank could easily have 15mL of water (as is common) or worse 15cc or even worse 15 cm^3 of water.

This doesn't make much sense to me. Sounds like you are assuming the water is in vapor form and will escape or change its form if the tank is opened. Ridiculous - drain the air, open the tank and dry it out. 

Also - 15 mL = 15cc = 15 cm^3