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Posts Tagged ‘mouthpiece’






What is a Rebreather?

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

rebreather-diver1-300x239  What is a Rebreather?

A typical Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus, or scuba gear for short, usually consists of a tank containing compressed air and a mouthpiece used to regulate the flow of air from the tank into the lungs. But breathing air in this manner is extremely inefficient, especially while considering the applications of this particular apparatus. This is because the air you breathe out still contains a fair amount of oxygen.

Modern scuba gear use rebreathers to filter out the exhaled carbon dioxide gas and gather the oxygen, to recirculate it until it is consumed. By doing so, the underwater breathing process becomes more efficient, allowing professional divers to remain submerged for a longer time.

Basically, a rebreather has three roles. One is to remove the carbon dioxide gas from the exhaled air. This is done by pumping it through a chamber containing sodium hydroxide, which reacts with the carbon dioxide and forms calcium carbonate. Secondly, the rebreather must complement the amount of consumed oxygen with fresh one from the tank. The oxygen tanks may contain either pure oxygen or oxygen mixed with either nitrogen or helium.

Alternatively, the rebreather must control the oxygen concentration inside the breathing loop after the exhaled oxygen is combined with fresh oxygen, for an optimal oxygen delivery sequence.

Types of rebreathers:

Currently, there are three types of rebreather systems commercially available - oxygen rebreathers, semi-closed circuit and closed circuit ones. The oxygen rebreathers make use of pure oxygen tanks as the only source of breathing gas. They are generally disadvantaged by the facts that they cannot be used in decompression depths and may pose oxygen intoxication risks.

Semi-closed circuit rebreathers on the other hand, carry tanks containing oxygen mixed with another gas - nitrogen, helium - and enable divers to surpass decompression depths without any risk of suffering from oxygen intoxication. Closed-circuit rebreathers are a combination between the two, using both pure oxygen and oxygen mixed with various gases.

Besides being highly efficient in making use of the gas carried by a diver, rebreathers are also lighter than any other conventional scuba gear. The normal concentration of oxygen inside the atmospheric air is about 21 percent, while that of nitrogen is 78 percent. Since nitrogen is not as critical as oxygen, almost three quarters of the gas carried in conventional scuba tanks is dead weight. Also, less nitrogen is circulated through the system with the help of rebreathers, thus the effects of decompression are reduced to minimum.

Because they recycle oxygen and carbon dioxide is filtered through sodium hydroxide, very little or no gas is ever pumped into the water to produce the characteristic bubbles.

Source


North Miami Beach detective dives into depths of dirty work

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

5846763embeddedprod_affiliate56-300x199 North Miami Beach detective dives into depths of dirty work

On one of North Miami Beach Detective Jim Randazzo’s first recovery missions as a police diver, he made a rookie mistake.

He found a plastic bag, its contents a mystery, and lifted it above his head to carry over to the canal bank.

Before he made it, the bottom of the bag fell open and the decomposed body of a dog — and the water it had been sitting in — spilled all over him.

“I’ve never done that again,” said Randazzo, who lives in Sunrise and is part of the North Miami Beach’s nine-member dive team.

That’s just one of the situations police divers encounter every time they splash into one of South Florida’s murky, animal-infested canals.

“When we are done with some of the dives, you can’t get to a bar of soap fast enough,” said Randazzo, 48, who is married with two daughters. He also works on the city’s SWAT team.

A North Miami Beach police detective’s salary ranges from $78,000 to $83,000, not including benefits.

Randazzo makes an additional $10 a week as a diver.

In order to become a police diver, a person must be a sworn officer and have advanced scuba certification. They must also take an 80-hour course to hone their skills: how to tow cars out of canals; rescue passengers after a plane crashes into water; and examine ship hulls for bombs, drugs and contraband.

It is not uncommon for them to come face-to-face — or face-to-tail — with snakes, crabs and the occasional alligator.

Divers often swim right into fluids that leak from vehicles dumped or accidentally driven into Miami-Dade waterways.

“Diesel is the worst,” said Randazzo, noting the stomach pains that follow. “It’s like drinking an entire pitcher of water in Mexico.”

Randazzo acknowledges the job often yields tragic discoveries: Divers sometimes stumble upon victims when performing routine searches.

Even wearing a mouthpiece, Randazzo said such discoveries have an unmistakable effect on his senses. “It’s like a pungent, sweet chocolaty taste that you will never forget. Never,” he said. “Once it gets in your mouth, it never leaves.”

On a recent Monday, Randazzo donned his flippers, 80-pound tank and wet suit and carefully jumped into North Miami Beach’s Snake Creek Canal as part of a training exercise.

When Randazzo surfaced, he was covered in green weeds and algae, carrying a rusted “No Parking” sign.

“It’s actually pretty clean today,” he said. “When you can see your hands, that’s a good day.”


 


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