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Scuba Equipment Care and Maintenance

Scuba Equipment Care and Maintenance

List Price: $13.95
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Scuba Equipment Care and Maintainence
Review: I found this book written by Michael Farley to be quite thourogh in it's approach to looking after your scuba gear. In the most part it is very comprehensive although common sense is a big issue in the majority. I did find it lacked very slightly in the repairs area. However if this is a book for a reletively new diver, then I would highly reccomend it. It is always a good idea to not get into any bad habbits as far as gear maintainence go's, once you have it is very hard to get out of them!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: What a disappointment. Save your money.
Review: When you bought your equipment at the dive shop, did you ask the sales clerk how to take care of it? Well, unless you completely forgot the answer, this book adds nothing new. Same old, same old, common sense gear care, things like rinse it off after a salt water soak, don't leave rubber in the sunlight. If you were expecting any really interesting information, like the gauges needed to properly set the breathing pressure on a regulator, forget it, all you get is the tired old "better left to factory trained representatives" rhetoric. This guy assumes that the average diver has never seen a screwdriver or wrench in their life and cannot possibly adjust or repair anything more challenging than a flashlight. Unless you have two left thumbs and zero mechanical aptitude, you don't need this book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: What a disappointment. Save your money.
Review: When you bought your equipment at the dive shop, did you ask the sales clerk how to take care of it? Well, unless you completely forgot the answer, this book adds nothing new. Same old, same old, common sense gear care, things like rinse it off after a salt water soak, don't leave rubber in the sunlight. If you were expecting any really interesting information, like the gauges needed to properly set the breathing pressure on a regulator, forget it, all you get is the tired old "better left to factory trained representatives" rhetoric. This guy assumes that the average diver has never seen a screwdriver or wrench in their life and cannot possibly adjust or repair anything more challenging than a flashlight. Unless you have two left thumbs and zero mechanical aptitude, you don't need this book.


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