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Leak Insure Sachets10 Standard

Leak Insure Sachets10 Standard
Brand: Leak Insure
Product Code: STD10
Reward Points: 0
Availability: In Stock
Price: £10.99
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Leak Insure Absorbent Sachets

Leak Insure has come up with a similarly absorbent solution in the form of sachets.

About the size of a teabag, these sachets can be wedged into the smallest of voids; several can be packed inside larger housings. We found that they could hold about 40ml of sea water - that\\\'s over two tablespoons per sachet. The gel absorbs water quite slowly so would stem a dripping leak quite well, but, as with the tampon solution, won\\\'t prevent a catastrophic failure. If you have a housing, put a couple of these inside -  they\\\'re probably the best way to save a camera from a small leak.

Leak Insure sachets contain highly absorbent granules that can hold 400 times their own weight in freshwater. The granules we use are fast acting, ideal for soaking up leaks quickly. These granules are less effective in sea water, so we have developed two types of sachet, one for freshwater and one for sea water. The sachet has been designed to hold approximately 40ml of water without the sachet splitting. However if the sachet does split it should not have any detrimental affect on you camera.

Other uses:

Leak Insure sachets not only protect your camera if your underwater case leaks, they also act as an excellent desiccant, even better than silica gel.

  1. During your dive the Leak Insure sachets will reduce fogging in your underwater case.
  2. Keep a sachet in your underwater camera housing when not in use to make sure it stays dry
  3. Prevents damage and corrosion from harming your camera equipment
  4. Help protect lens and electronics from humidity during a dive or while in storage.
  5.  
  6. Instructions

    The Leak Insure sachets have been design to fit most underwater camera housings or other underwater equipment.

    It goes without saying that you should not rely on the sachets alone, you should always take every precaution to prevent leaks in the first place.

  7. Step by Step

    1. Work out the best place to put the Leak Insure Sachet. The sachet needs to be placed at the lowest part of the housing when the camera is not being used.

       If your camera is positively buoyant this is likely to be near where the lanyard/strap attaches to your camera housing.

      If your camera housing is negatively buoyant, then the sachet should be placed directly opposite the point where the lanyard/strap attaches to your camera housing.

      The granules in the sachet will only soak up water while they can expand, so where you place the sachet needs to have enough space to allow optimal expansion.

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  1. Take a Leak Insure sachet and make sure the granules are loose (if not break them up) and spread across the sachet. Shake of any loose dust or fibres.
  2. Place the sachet in between the camera and housing ensuring it is flat.
  3. Close your housing carefully to ensure the sachet does not infringe the O ring.

    Note: There is no reason why you can’t use more that one sachet. In fact we recommend it on larger underwater housing for video or SLR cameras. Better to be safe than sorry!

 

After your dive

Open your underwater case and remove the sachet. If the case has leaked and the sachet has expanded, dispose of the sachet carefully in a waste bin.

DO NOT throw on the floor or deck. When wet the granules turn in to a gel that is extremely slippery.

If everything is OK then place the sachet back in the water tight container.

What happens if you get a leak?

If your housing starts to leak the main objective is to get your camera out of the water as soon as possible. The Leak Insure sachets buy you that extra bit of valuable time.

Turn the system off and turn the housing so the water flows towards the Leak Insure Sachet.  Ascend immediately, but don\\\'t exceed a safe rate (18 metres/60 feet per minute, or as stip­ulated by your computer) Do Not miss your safety stop. Remove the housing from the water keeping it in the same position. Dry yourself and the housing and remove the camera/camcorder. Don\\\'t reuse the housing until you have it serviced.

Shut off the camera/camcorder (if it\\\'s not already), remove the battery and allow any damp air or moisture to dry out in an air-conditioned room. After several hours, if you see no moisture, you can replace the battery and see if it functions. If it does, you\\\'re probably okay, though water damage can take weeks or months to mani­fest itself. If it doesn\\\'t work, unfortunately it\\\'s prob­ably beyond economical repair.

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Disclaimer

Leak Insure Sachets are design to give you more time to get your under water equipment out of the water in the event of a leak. They are not a guarantee that if you get a leak they will save your underwater equipment. We accept no liability for damaged caused to your equipment.

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