Breathing Oxygen Systems And Components Parts

(Page 5) End item NSN parts page 5 of 10
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
12271-5-21-4 Air Breathing Air Duct Hose
009182587
1241206-5CR0120 Nonmetallic Hose Assembly
008930845
124392-5CR-0160 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
009565456
124392-5CR-0480 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
008872965
124392-5CR-14 Air Breat Air Duct Hose Assembly
007878437
124392-5CR-16 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
009565456
124392-5CR-32 Air Breat Air Duct Hose Assembly
000556795
124392-5CR-48 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
008872965
124392-6CR-0720 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
012309350
124392-6CR-60 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
012295671
124392-6CR-600 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
012295671
124392-6CR-6000 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
012295671
124392-6CR-72 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
012309350
124392-6CR-7200 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
012309350
124392-8CR-0120 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
007878434
124392-8CR-0240 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
001055034
124392-8CR-12 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
007878434
124392-8CR-24 Air Breathing Hose Assembly
001055034
124392-8CR-25 Nonmetallic Hose Assembly
013088450
1245 Tag Assembly
004911081
Page: 5

Breathing Oxygen Systems And Components

Picture of Breathing Oxygen Systems And Components

An oxygen tank is an oxygen storage vessel, which is either held under pressure in gas cylinders, or as liquid oxygen in a cryogenic storage tank.

Oxygen tanks are used to store gas for:

Breathing oxygen is delivered from the storage tank to users by use of the following methods: oxygen mask, nasal cannula, full face diving mask, diving helmet, demand valve, oxygen rebreather, built in breathing system (BIBS), oxygen tent, and hyperbaric oxygen chamber.

Contrary to popular belief scuba divers very rarely carry oxygen tanks. The vast majority of divers breathe air or nitrox stored in a diving cylinder. A small minority breathe trimix, heliox or other exotic gases. Some of these may carry pure oxygen for accelerated decompression or as a component of a rebreather. Some shallow divers, particularly naval divers, use oxygen rebreathers or have done so historically.

Oxygen is rarely held at pressures higher than 200 bar / 3000 psi, due to the risks of fire triggered by high temperatures caused by adiabatic heating when the gas changes pressure when moving from one vessel to another.

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