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I'm thinking of using a pub nitrogen cylinder to inflate the dinghy. How many fills will I get per full cylinder?
Expanding gases get VERY cold and can cause the dinghy material to become brittle whilst frozen. Make sure you do not damage it.
That is quite true. Also, a cylinder of that size is pretty heavy - the wall has to be quite thick to carry that sort of pressure. Personally, I would go for a good electric inflator - or better still, get some exercise!![]()
Having some spare time to kill while waiting for the present gale to die down, I calculated it. A 2.7 metre dinghy with 40 cm tubes has a capacity of 678 litres, roughly speaking without trying to allow for tapered ends, bow tube, etc.
Pub gas is either CO2 or a mixture of CO2 and nitrogen, depending on the product it is intended for, beer and soft drinks CO2, lager and guinness the mixture. The gas comes in bottles of 10 - 50 litres at 200 bar pressure. The smallest of these therefore contains 2000 litres at NTP.
Again, not allowing for what pressure you can get into the dinghy, you will just about get 3 inflations from a 10 litre bottle.
I have been looking at electric but which one? Ones I have used still require a manual pump to do the last bit.
A few years ago we bought a Coleman cordless one like this
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Coleman-2000000834-Rechargeable-Quick-Pump/dp/B00005JD40
and it's absolutely superb.
Yes you have to manually pump about 3-4 pumps max with the footpump to get it really firm, but it makes such short work of the main inflation that's no hardship at all.
Inflates a 2.4m dinghy in less than 5 minutes - about 2 mins per side.
One charge lasts years. Bought ours about 3 years ago at a show for £20 (on offer) and I'm still on the first charge!
Can recharge from either mains or 12v. Can be used to fast deflate the dinghy as well. Cordless, no wires to trip on. Weighs about 1-2 kg - probably about 1/10 as much as a pub cylinder. What's not to like!?
+1. The fact it is rechargeable means no cables or restrictions. ...Amazon link above is showing £54 but search their site and you can find it for £27
And you'd need some sort of regulator to step down the pressure to about 2 - 3 bar. Just attaching a hose and cracking the valve would lead to an interesting dance with the end of the hose.
Does the Coleman rechargeable inflator get the dinghy up to full pressure?
I have been looking at electric but which one? Ones I have used still require a manual pump to do the last bit.
Strange they call it a Manometer. It seems to have both turbine and a piston pumps, which is good for the last bit. I'd rather save nearly £100 and do the last few pumps by hand. However, I wonder if it could power a breathing tube 1m under the surface.The inflator to buy is this one http://marinedirect.co.uk/bravo-btp12-manometer-p-466.html
back to original point about using a cylinder.
The slide-rafts used on commercial airliners do not have sufficient 'bottle contents' to inflate them, they use the bottle pressure to power an integral inflator pump, that sort of 'draws in' extra air. This is because the size of bottle needed for a self-contained inflation would be enormous!