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It passes thru the regulator where the surrounding pressure of the water regulates the pressure of the air in the line so that it is equal. This prevents any pressure differential that would make it hard to breathe.

As for the air in the Scuba cylinder, nothing happens to it as you go down. The pressure stays the same, etc. As to how breathing from a SCUBA cylinder works, there is an excellent answer under the question "How do you breathe underwater when you go scuba diving?"

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15y ago
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14y ago

The deeper the diver goes, the greater the pressure exerted on the diver's body. This results in a number of things:

  1. the diver will consume their air supply at a faster rate *
  2. the diver's body will absorb nitrogen at a greater rate, reducing their no decompression time (or increasing the length of decompression stops they need to perform before safely returning to the surface) **
  3. they will begin to experience nitrogen narcosis, usually at about a depth of 100 feet +
  4. if they go deep enough, the oxygen content in their gas will present a toxicity risk, limiting the length of time they can stay down **
* In all these examples, I have assumed our diver is breathing air on open circuit scuba. If the diver was using a rebreather, greater depth normally does not affect their gas supply (because it is recycled).

** Some of these effects can be offset by using different gas mixes. For example, breathing nitrox (oxygen enriched air) will help mitigate decompression penalties, although it would worsen any oxygen toxicity penalties.

+ Using gases containing a helium mix would reduce nitrogen narcosis.
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14y ago

Each 10 meters deep the air volume in the tank compressed to the half

0m = 100%

10m= 50%

20m= 33%

30m= 25%

Addition

Actually nothing happens to the gas inside a scuba cylinder during a descent (or an ascent). The cylinder is not a flexible container so the pressure, volume, etc. remains constant. However, once the gas is released from the cylinder (i.e. when a diver breathes from from the cylinder, then the gas would be compressed as compared to the surface. The description above shows the amount of compression that would occur in that instance.

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11y ago

Not really. However, over time, if the air remains unchanged it has a "taste" that is not pleasurable, and potentially could include something harmful. In addition, SCUBA tanks should get a visual inspection once a year and be tested every five years.

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13y ago

A cardinal rule for scuba diving tanks is to never completely empty your scuba diving tank. When planning your scuba dives, it is important that you consider to complete your dive with enough air left within your scuba diving tank.

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13y ago

Due to the mass of the water above you, as you descend in to the water, the pressure increases at about 1 bar for every 10m. This is why if you have been in a deep swimming pool you can sometimes feel pressure on your ears if you swim to the bottom of the pool. The same is true in SCUBA diving but the pressure involved can get much larger. Of course there are ways in which the SCUBA diving kit and the diver themselves can deal with the pressure (such as ear-clearing to prevent barotrauma)

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Q: What happens to the air from a SCUBA tank as you go down?
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How can you fill a tank of compressed air without an air compresser?

You can use a scuba tank, but that is it.


What do the numbers mean on a scuba tank?

The numbers on a scuba tank reveal 3 things. Serial no. of the tank. Type metal. and the current hydro date.


When filling a scuba tank from a high pressure reservoir the air goes from a high pressure reservoir to a low pressure reservoir so the air expands into the scuba tank. Shouldnt this cool the tank?

Think on it a bit closer: -- The expansion is happening in the high-pressure reservoir, as some of the air leaves and the rest expands to fill the volume. So you'd expect the supply tank to cool as it empties. -- The compression is happening in the SCUBA tank, where you're continuously stuffing more and more air into the same volume. So you expect the SCUBA tank to warm as it fills.


Why does your scuba tank not get crushed if it is empty?

a scuba tank is very thick, and so it wont be used if empty the valve remains to be closed, not allowing any air to excape, disallowing to be crushed. if the air cant leave the tank it wont crush.


Is the oxygen and nitrogen in a scuba tank considered a heterogeneous?

I would think so, because there are two of them mixed together. Air in a scuba tank or anywhere else should be heterogeneous. A scuba tank filled with either oxygen or nitrogen would be homogeneous.


How many cubic feet does a 2250 psi scuba tank hold?

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You want to convert a SCUBA tank for use as CNG tank?

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What is the vest that you wear in scuba diving called and what is its purpose?

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What does a diver use to help them breathe underwater?

The diver uses an air tank, which is a tank filled with compressed air. It has a hose that goes from the tank to the mouth, which is held in the mouth by a 'mouth piece'. The tank has a regulator that allows the pressure in the tank to be regulated down for normal breathing.


How do you float to the surface using a scuba set?

While SCUBA diving you are wearing a fabric vest that is known as your boucency compensator or your B.C. This also happens to be the vest that keeps your tank attached to your back. When you wish to float to the surface, you slowly put air (from your tank) into your BC. The air released in the vest is much less dense than the water and thus it travels to the surface pulling you with it.


What type of gas is in a scuba diver tank?

Air...Sometimes Have Abit Of Oxygen In..But Most Of The Time Just Normal Air.


What is the best way to keep water out of a scuba tank?

The best way to be sure that water does not enter your scuba dive tank when diving, is to never allow it to be completely be emptied of air pressure. Always plan to leave at least 1-2Mpa (10-20 bars) left in them to ensure that moisture does not enter. If for some reason, the scuba dive tank pressure should be completely exhausted, it is important to immediately close the valve to keep moisture out. When bleeding the air from your scuba tank, be sure to bleed the air slowly, as quick bleeding may cause internal condensation.