Phil, I asked the same question a few months ago and the simple answer I got was 13 cu.ft is a tank from 2 liter 66 cu.ft "" "" 10 liter 80 cu.ft "" "" 12 liter 98 cu.ft "" "" 15 liter 120 cu.ft "" "" 18 liter 131 cu.ft "" "" 20 liter Hope this serves your needs. I would like to though know where in the metric world you live. Rob de Groot (from Holland) Rob.de_Groot@Gi*.In*.co* ______________________________ Reply Separator _________________________________ Subject: Metric Author: owner-techdiver@aquanaut.com at nxinternet Date: 24-6-97 11:52 Having always dived with cylinders measured (internal volume) in Litres, (where Total Air Capacity [Litres] = vol.[litres] x pressure[bar]), I have difficulty keeping up with the conversations which talk about cu.ft capacity cylinders. Can anybody enlighten me a) How is this capacity worked out? & b) Rough equivelents in Cu.ft. for 3L, 7L, 10L, 12L & 15L cylinders. Phil G. P.S. ..or the U.S. could go metric!, which ever is easiest. -- Phil Gerrard -- Send mail for the `techdiver' mailing list to `techdiver@aquanaut.com'. Send list subscription requests to `techdiver-request@aquanaut.com'. -- Send mail for the `techdiver' mailing list to `techdiver@aquanaut.com'. Send list subscription requests to `techdiver-request@aquanaut.com'.
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