Flatline & Nitroduck Hydrotesting in the Great White North

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  • Def Jeff
    JMJ Factory Vik #02
    • Nov 2004
    • 134

    #1

    Flatline & Nitroduck Hydrotesting in the Great White North

    Hey all,

    Been a long time since I've been on here. Glad to see its still here! I'm thinking of getting back into the sport, so the first step will be getting my tanks hydro'd again. Now the last time I was active, the only place that knew how to take apart Flatlines and Nitroducks was this place,



    But since I'm in Toronto, getting the tanks out to them would be pretty expensive.

    Is there someone in Canada that can hydro test these kinds of tanks?
  • athomas
    Of course it works-its AGD
    • Jan 2002
    • 8039

    #2
    Any place that does air breathing tanks for the fire stations can do them. There are usually several in each city.
    Except for the Automag in front, its usually the man behind the equipment that counts.

    Comment

    • addbot
      Registered User
      • Jul 2012
      • 51

      #3
      agreed on the fire stations...

      Comment

      • Def Jeff
        JMJ Factory Vik #02
        • Nov 2004
        • 134

        #4
        Hey guys thanks for the replies. I understand I can take them anywhere that does scuba or fire station tanks. But from what I understand Flatline regs and possibly Nitroduck regs, because they are adjustable tanks, its not very easy to get the regs off. So they need to be sent to a hydrotester that knows how to take them apart and apparently the site I linked does, but they're in Washington State.

        So am I wrong in thinking I need to find someone who knows Flatline and Nitroduck regs specifically?

        Comment

        • p8ntbal4me
          No more UTBs!
          • Aug 2003
          • 2560

          #5
          My local paintball field sends them to the same web place you listed in your original post.
          I have had mixed results at first and then after a few "hey um,.... you didnt mount the regulator so I know you didnt test it" comments,.. they have been on a streak of good fortune with all my tanks.

          Id say you can have anyone do it,... but I would look at your "E" date FIRST and decide if you can legally have your tank tested.

          Go here and look at the date codes: If your tank does not expire,... you are okay.



          Most tanks now have a "shelf life".

          Meaning they expire after,.. say,... 20 years. And they can be re-tested so many times at certain intervals. All based on the "E" Date" on your tank.

          Keep in mind,.. as of a few years ago,.. not many fields were honoring "5 year tanks". Some were so stuck in the "all tanks are good for no more than 3 year hydro" regardless of what the date was good for,... they got into some issues with their own equipment not being re-tested in the same intervals as they demanded their customers to have done. As far as I know,.. this has all changed.

          In my opinion,... testing a tank 1 year before the expiration date of that interval year is a good idea.
          _______________________
          Jai "P8ntbal4me" Menard

          Comment

          • bbotts77
            Dirty Frank
            • Oct 2009
            • 558

            #6
            Originally posted by Def Jeff View Post
            So am I wrong in thinking I need to find someone who knows Flatline and Nitroduck regs specifically?
            If you're concerned about having someone work on it who is not familiar with Flatline regs, I'd send it off to Ninja. I can't remember his name, but a former AGD tech works there.

            My Feedback

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            • Def Jeff
              JMJ Factory Vik #02
              • Nov 2004
              • 134

              #7
              Awesome guys. Thank you for all the information!

              Comment

              • BTAutoMag
                AO's Problem Child
                • Oct 2001
                • 7199

                #8
                you can mail it to ninja which I would prefer over fire stations as Ive seen fire stations %&$# up regs
                sigpic

                Comment

                • athomas
                  Of course it works-its AGD
                  • Jan 2002
                  • 8039

                  #9
                  There is nothing to taking regs off. They all thread into the bottle neck. All regs are the same with that respect. Once the air is removed from the bottle, there should be very little resistance needed to rotate the regulator and unscrew it.
                  Except for the Automag in front, its usually the man behind the equipment that counts.

                  Comment

                  • BTAutoMag
                    AO's Problem Child
                    • Oct 2001
                    • 7199

                    #10
                    see, im not arguing how hard they are to remove... I'm just saying that I've seen them screwed up. if you scratch a fire extinguisher, no one cares
                    sigpic

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