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Scuba Gear Service
Scuba Gear Service
  • Five Signs Your Gear Needs Service Before the Next Trip
    Equipment | Service

    Five Signs Your Gear Needs Service Before the Next Trip

    ByRob Hancock March 31, 2026March 31, 2026

    Most dive gear does not fail all at once with an obvious warning. It usually gives smaller signs first. A slightly sticky inflator. A regulator that feels just a bit different than it used to. A hose that looks a little tired. A computer battery that is “probably fine for one more weekend.” Divers get…

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  • The Rotational Service Model: Ending the “All-at-Once” Downtime
    Equipment | Fleet | Service

    The Rotational Service Model: Ending the “All-at-Once” Downtime

    ByRob Hancock February 27, 2026February 23, 2026

    If you manage a fleet of 20, 50, or 100 regulator sets, you know the “Maintenance Nightmare.” Usually, it looks like this: You realize your service records are expiring across the board. You box up every piece of life-support equipment you own and ship it off to a shop. For the next three weeks, your…

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  • The Salt Trap: Where Rinsing Fails
    Equipment | Service

    The Salt Trap: Where Rinsing Fails

    ByRob Hancock February 23, 2026February 28, 2026

    We’ve all been told since Open Water Day One: “Rinse your gear in fresh water after every dive.” It’s the golden rule of scuba. But as a technician who spends my days looking at the “guts” of regulators, I have a confession to make: Your post-dive rinse isn’t doing as much as you think it…

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  • Visual Inspection 101: What You Should See Before You Submerge
    Equipment | Service

    Visual Inspection 101: What You Should See Before You Submerge

    ByRob Hancock January 23, 2026February 23, 2026

    We’ve all seen it on the dive boat: a diver pulling a regulator out of a mesh bag that looks like it was recovered from a 17th-century shipwreck. They shrug, mutter, “It breathed fine last lobster season,” and jump in. At Scuba Gear Service, we believe your pre-dive check should start long before you’re standing…

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  • The “3-Week Rule”: Why You Shouldn’t Service Your Gear the Week You Fly
    Bouyancy Control | Dive Computers | Equipment | Regulator | Service

    The “3-Week Rule”: Why You Shouldn’t Service Your Gear the Week You Fly

    ByRob Hancock November 15, 2025February 19, 2026

    We see it every summer: A frantic diver calls us on Tuesday because they are flying to Cozumel on Friday, and their regulator is hissing. While we offer Express Service, waiting until the last minute is the riskiest way to start a vacation. The Problem with “Fresh” Service Technicians are human. O-rings settle. Seats break…

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  • Why Smart Divers Are Shipping Their Gear (Instead of Driving It)
    Bouyancy Control | Dive Computers | Equipment | Regulator

    Why Smart Divers Are Shipping Their Gear (Instead of Driving It)

    ByRob Hancock October 30, 2025February 19, 2026

    If you need heart surgery, you don’t go to a General Practitioner; you go to a Cardiologist. The same logic applies to your life-support equipment. Many local dive shops are fantastic retail hubs, but they are often “generalists.” They teach classes, sell fins, fill tanks, and try to service 20 different brands of gear in…

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  • The Garage Graveyard: How to Ruin Your Gear Without Getting Wet
    Bouyancy Control | Dive Computers | Equipment | Regulator

    The Garage Graveyard: How to Ruin Your Gear Without Getting Wet

    ByRob Hancock September 3, 2025February 19, 2026

    “It’s been sitting in my garage for two years, so it should be fine, right?” Actually, sitting in a garage is often harder on scuba gear than diving it. Scuba gear is made of rubber, silicone, and plastic. These materials hate three things: The Inspection Requirement If your gear has been in “storage” for more…

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  • When is Used Scuba Gear a True Bargain? (And When is it Junk?)
    Bouyancy Control | Dive Computers | Equipment | Regulator

    When is Used Scuba Gear a True Bargain? (And When is it Junk?)

    ByRob Hancock August 29, 2025February 19, 2026

    We all love a deal. And in the world of scuba diving, where a full kit can cost upwards of $3,000, the used market is tempting. But as a technician who sees the “insides” of gear every day, I can tell you that not all bargains are created equal. Is it safe to buy used…

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  • The “Frankenstein Fleet”: Why Inconsistency is a Safety Risk
    Bouyancy Control | Dive Computers | Equipment | Fleet | Regulator | Service

    The “Frankenstein Fleet”: Why Inconsistency is a Safety Risk

    ByRob Hancock July 15, 2025February 19, 2026

    Managing gear for 30 divers and 40+ regulators is logistical chaos. When you send that gear to a standard retail shop, it’s often handled by multiple technicians, each with their own “feel” for how a regulator should breathe. The Danger of “Personal Preference” Inconsistent tuning creates a dangerous fleet. When Regulator A breathes hard and…

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  • What is the Best Scuba Gear? (You’re Asking the Wrong Question)
    Bouyancy Control | Dive Computers | Equipment | Regulator

    What is the Best Scuba Gear? (You’re Asking the Wrong Question)

    ByRob Hancock June 10, 2025February 19, 2026

    “What is the best regulator on the market?” “Which BCD should I buy?” As an SSI Instructor Certifier and NAUI Technical Instructor and someone who has certified thousands of divers, these are the most common questions I hear. They are good questions, but they are incomplete. Online reviews and “Top 10” lists are useful, but…

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  • The Sticky Button: Why Rinsing Your BCD Isn’t Enough
    Bouyancy Control | Equipment

    The Sticky Button: Why Rinsing Your BCD Isn’t Enough

    ByRob Hancock May 15, 2025February 23, 2026

    We are all taught to rinse our BCDs after every dive. And while that helps, fresh water can’t dissolve everything. If you dive in saltwater, microscopic salt crystals eventually find their way inside your power inflator mechanism. As the water evaporates, these crystals harden into something resembling concrete. The “Sticky Button” Scenario One day, you…

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  • Equipment | Regulator

    Why “It Breaths Fine” Isn’t Good Enough (The Dangers of IP Creep)

    ByRob Hancock April 22, 2025February 23, 2026

    “I haven’t serviced my reg in three years, but it breathes fine.” As a technician, I hear this constantly. It’s the scuba equivalent of saying, “I haven’t changed the oil in my truck in 30,000 miles, but the engine still turns over.” While technically true, you are operating on borrowed time. The reality is that…

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SERVICE AREA

Based in Trinity, Texas. Serving individual divers across the Houston–Dallas corridor and throughout the US by mail-in service. Currently supporting fleet customers in Texas, Oklahoma, and Alabama, with capacity for programs in other U.S. states.

Mail-in service preferred; local arrangements available by request.

713-314-6777

info@scubagearservice.com

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Scuba Gear Service
116 W Main
Unit 1767
Trinity, TX. 75862

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