Originally Posted by
zombie
For the intended purpose yes. If the stenner gets slightly different diameter tubes or one tube collects a little bit of gunk, you need to replace the entire head to "calibrate" it since both heads are fixed flow rate. If the same happens on a DOS, a quick calibration will get them back in check. The only thing that makes the stenner more "reliable" is the lack of electronics that are more likely to fail than a motor, but that is as much of a disadvantage as an advantage since you lose a bunch of useful features to have that.
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