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Stepping Into March

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

One of the busiest months on Koh Tao starts off with a bang.

discover-technical-diving-2-300x225 Stepping Into March

Koh Tao, Thailand - Big Blue Tech was very busy today with the combined effort of most staff working around the clock with different activites.

Dean Jenkins was out taking the divemaster interns out for a dive on one of our local wrecks and tooks some time out for some diving in tech gear. Ash and Andrew were working together to complete a Search and Recovery Specialty for Felix including search patterns, lift bags, knot tying and scenarios. Helen is teaching advanced level courses and spent most of the day in tech gear and analyzing nitrox.Thomas was out on the rebreather. Duncan and James had the day off so played football on the beach.

This might not seem very hectic but tomorrow is the start of a tech course from beginner to extended range followed by more technical diving leading up to a trip at the end of the month.


Technical Divemaster Internship in Thailand

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

tech-intern-diving-thailand-1-2-300x225 Technical Divemaster Internship in Thailand

Today is the official start for the technical diving internship for Andy and Mark. Andy returns a year after completing his dive master course with Big Blue and later becoming a PADI instructor in the Uk. Marl completed his solo diver certification earlier in the year and has decided to just in the deep end head first to become a technical diving instructor.

The 3 month intensive internship includes everything needed to be a technical diving instructor in today’s diving climate. The following certifications will be EARNED in the coming months.

* Gas Blender
* Compressor Operator
* Visual Inspections Procedures
* Equipment Service Technician
* O2 service technician
* Full Face Mask Diver
* DAN Oxygen Provider
* Advanced Nitrox Diver
* Cavern Diver
* Unlimited diving
* Decompression Procedures Diver
* Advanced Gas Blender
* SCR Rebreather Diver
* Solo Diver
* Research Diver
* All Khao Sok Trips
* All Similans Islands Liveaboards
* Extended Range and Trimix Diver
* TDI Technical Divemaster Rating
* BSAC Extended Range, compressor operator and oxygen provider Instructor
* Aqualung Service Technician Instructor

Today started with basic gas laws, dive planning and a review of nitrox and diving terms. In the afternoon the interns started their visual inspection course by servicing their own twin set and cylinders. These twin sets along with diving gear would be their own to use for the duration of the 3 months so it was essential they learned not only how to use them but also the process to troubleshoot and service them. Even Ash joined in for a bit of a theory refresher.

Tomorrow the interns move into advanced nitrox planning along with more visual inspections before the weekend.

Our internships happen every 3 months, the next available space is march 15th.


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


TDI Mixed Gas Closed Circuit Rebreather Diver

Friday, November 20th, 2009

tdi mixed gas closed circuit rebreather diver

Introduction:
This is the intermediate level certification course for divers wishing to utilize a closed circuit rebreather (CCR) for mixed gas diving. The objective of the course is to train divers in the benefits, hazards and proper procedures for diving a CCR and to develop basic CCR diving skills to a maximum of two hundred (200) fsw / sixty (60) msw using an mixed gas dilluent containing sixteen (16%) percent or greater oxygen.

The student must:
1. Be a minimum age of eighteen (18).
2. Show a minimum fifty (50) hours distributed over at least fifty (50) dives on a CCR Unit
3. Minimum certification level of TDI Air Dilluent CCR Course or equivalent from agencies recognized by TDI

Duration:
1. Minimum of three hundred eighty (380) minutes open water training to be completed over a minimum of six (6) dives.
2. Four (4) dives must be decompression dives.

Price:
From 50,000 THB When Booked Online

Course Includes:
Certification, Manual, Equipment Rental, Instructor and Student Gas and DiveSorb.

Not Included:
Accommodation, Food and Drink, Diving Insurance (DAN), Boat Fees

pdf document Download the full course outline in PDF



Course Enrollment Details:
Enrollment in a technical course guarantees you excellent and complete training. However, it does not guarantee you a certification card. You must earn that. All of our training is performance based.


TDI Air Diluent Closed Circuit Rebreather Diver

Friday, November 20th, 2009

tdi air diluent closed circuit rebreather diver

Introduction:
This is the entry level certification course for divers wishing to utilize the Inspiration / Evolution Closed Circuit Rebreather (CCR) for air diving. The objective of the course is to train divers in the benefits, hazards and proper procedures for diving a CCR and to develop basic CCR diving skills to a maximum of one hundred thirty (130) fsw / forty (40) msw using an air diluent for minimal decompression diving (no greater than 5 minutes required at 20fsw / 6 meters).

The student must:
1. Be a minimum age of eighteen (18).
2. Show proof of sixty (60) logged open water dives.
3. Minimum certification level of Advanced Nitrox Diver (Advanced Nitrox Diver may be combined with this course) or equivalent from agencies recognized by TDI.

Duration:
Confined Water Execution:
1. Minimum of one hundred twenty (120) minutes confined water training to a maximum of thirty (30) fsw / six (9) msw.

Open Water Execution:
1. Minimum of three hundred eighty (360) minutes open water training to be completed over a minimum of six (6) dives with a gradual increase in depth each day to a maximum of one hundred thirty (130) fsw / forty (40) msw.

Price:
From 40,000 THB When Booked Online

Course Includes:
Boat Fees, Certification, Manual, Equipment Rental, Instructor and Student Gas and DiveSorb.

Not Included:
Accommodation, Food and Drink, Diving Insurance (DAN)

pdf document Download the full course outline in PDF



Course Enrollment Details:
Enrollment in a technical course guarantees you excellent and complete training. However, it does not guarantee you a certification card. You must earn that. All of our training is performance based.


TDI Semi-Closed Circuit Rebreather Diver

Friday, November 20th, 2009

tdi semi-closed rebreather Diver

Introduction:
This is the entry level certification for recreational divers wishing to use a semi closed rebreather. This course trains the diver about hazards, planning, equipment assembly and proper procedures for semi closed rebreather diving.

The student must:
1. Be a minimum age of fifteen (15).
2. Have a minimum certification of TDI Nitrox or equivalent.

Duration:
Three days of training with four (4) dives are required with a minimum accumulated bottom time of one hundred (100)

Price:
From 20,000 THB When Booked Online

Course Includes:
Boat Fees, Certification, Manual, Equipment Rental, Instructor and Student Gas and DiveSorb.

Not Included:
Accommodation, Food and Drink, Diving Insurance (DAN)

pdf document Download the full course outline in PDF



Course Enrollment Details:
Enrollment in a technical course guarantees you excellent and complete training. However, it does not guarantee you a certification card. You must earn that. All of our training is performance based.


Technical Diving Training Team

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Our technical training team is comprised of skilled and experienced individuals who excel in their own field of expertise across the technical scuba diving industry in Thailand. No one can train divers to do everything, with that we have specialists who focus on their own personal interest in the area they’re responsible for.

Our team work and live in a very small community of technical scuba diving explorers who’s main goal is to train and expose divers to this ever growing style of technical deep water exploration and advanced scuba diving education in Thailand.

We provide technical diving leadership and education in English, French, German, Spanish, Swedish, Thai and Japanese.


James Thornton-Allan

Director Technical Diving Operations

James Thornton-Allan

James is responsible for the day to day operations of Big Blue Tech and the on going quality assurance of technical diving operations including the expanding selection of dive sites and training courses for Big Blue Diving branches across Thailand.

James provides contact and liaison through all facets of technical diving at big blue and provides on going consultation for other technical diving companies and agencies. For all course and diving bookings please contact him directly.

Contact: James@bigbluetech.net


Yvonne Fries

Manager Technical Diving Operations

Yvonne Fries

Yvonne is responsible for supporting the Director of Technical Diving Operations by managing the finances, scheduling and accounts along with all other related activities for Big Blue Tech in Thailand.

Yvonne has been working for Big Blue Tech for several years and is one of the more senior and respected members of the team.

Falls Sie Interesse haben am technischen Tauchen, Hoehlentauchen oder Rebreather Tauchen in oder um thailand herum, bitte kontaktieren Sie mich per Eunter

Wir bieten alle Kurse auch in deutscher Sprache an.

Contact: Yvonne@bigbluetech.net


Ash Dunn

Diving Facilities Manager

Cory Lewis

Ash is our Advanced Gas Blender, Equipment and Oxygen Service Technician and Technical Divemaster. On top of these skills, Ash is responsible for the logistics and delivery of suppot services for all diving with Big Blue Tech.

Ash provides logistic support and serviced equipment for all our technical diving expeditions across Thailand.

Contact: Ash@bigbluetech.net


Andy Holdaway

Technical Divemaster

Cory Lewis

Andy is our technical divemaster. He is responsible for leading certified technical divers and conducting skill workshops for divers who have not been current with their diving.

When not diving Andy can be found travelling between Thailand and England or enhancing his education and skills to become a technical diving instructor in the future.

Contact: Andy@bigbluetech.net


Sonia Scott

Hyperbaric Services Manager

Bruce Konefe

Sonia is responsible for the health and safety of all our divers as a dive medic and hyperbaric chamber operator.

Sonia supports technical diving by being an onsite representative for all diving related health concerns while working with other medical facilities and professionals in the region.

Contact: sonia@bigbluetech.net


Panos Iosifoglou

Technical Dive Manager Similans

Hannah Lusby

Panos is our in house technical dive managers who’s responsibility is for the west coast technical diving in the Similan Islands and Khao Lak. He provides logistics, underwater guide, supervision and liaison through our shop in Khao Lak and on our liveaboard the Mv Pawara.

Panos is also responsible for Cave Diving and Gas Blending Facilities for the west coast on Thailand.

Contact: Panos@bigbluetech.net


Simon Garitty

Technical Instructor Trainer

Simon Garity

Simon is our SSI (Scuba Schools International) Instructor Trainer providing instructor level course, cross-overs and general course development for the Big Blue Diving franchise. Simon is also heavily involved with the SSI-TXR curriculum of technical courses.

Contact: Simon@bigbluetech.net


Guillaume Fargues

Technical Instructor Development Coordinator

Guillaume Fargues

Guillaume is responsible for coordinating instructor development courses and assisting in their application. Regardless of what level you wish to complete be it technical diving instructor or open water instructor Guillaume creates an effortless process and private tutor beyond what is already provided.

Guillaume is also our in house French instructor and is available for translation or entire courses upon request

Contactez-nous pour en savoir plus sur les formations tech, ainsi que la plongee en cavernes et grottes et avec recycleur partout en Thailande. Nous offrons des cours individuels dans de nombreuses langues dont le francais pour tous les niveaux, de debutant a instructeur tech.

Contact:guillaume@bigbluetech.net


Dean Jenkins

Technical Internship Coordinator

Dean Jenkins

Dean is responsible for the ongoing training and development of our Technical Dive Master Program. Those completing their tech dive master program will work closely with dean for all aspects from physics to water skills.

Dean overseas your entire development and insures that all student needs are addressed including accommodation and equipment.

Contact: dean@bigbluetech.net


Technical Diving Library and Resources

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

TDI Resources (Technical Diving International)

Liability and Release Form

Medical Form

Physician Form

Semi Closed Rebreather Diver

Solo Diver

Air Dilluent CCR Diver

Mixed Gas CCR Diver

Advanced Mixed Gas CCR Diver

Cavern Diver

Intro to Cave Diver

Full Cave Diver

Gas Blender

Advanced Gas Blender

Oxygen Service Technician

Nitrox Diver

Advanced Wreck Diver

Nitrox Diver

Intro to Tech

Advanced Nitrox Diver

Decompression Procedures

Extended Range

Trimix Diver

Advanced Trimix Diver

CMAS Resources (Confédération Mondiale des Activités Subaquatiques)

3 Srar Diver

2 Star Diver

1 Star Diver

Rescue Diver

Children and Youth Diving

Mixed Gas Diver

Normoxic Trimix Diver

Overhead Scooter Diver

Closed Circuit Rebreather Diver

Semi Closed Rebreather Diver

Standards and Procedures

Unerwater Navigation

Trimix Diver

Training and Diving

Underwater Scooter

Cave Diver

Gas Blender and Service Technician

Extended Range Diver

Scientific Diver

PADI Resources (Professional Association of Diving Instructors)

Gas Blender Release

Blender Fill Log

RSTC Medical

Liability Form

Release Form

Release for Nitrox Diving

BSAC Resources (British Sub Aqua Club)

Combined Nitrox Diver

Gas Blender

Advanced Nitrox Diver

Sport Mixed Gas Diver

Extended Range Diver

Advanced Mixed Gas

IANTD Resources (International Association of Nitrox and Technical Divers)

Normoxic Trimix

Technical Diver

Trimix CCR

Gas Blender

Air CCR

Liability Form

Advanced Nitrox

Technical Cave

Nitrox Diver

Release Form

Military Diving Resources

U.S Navy Diving Manual

Contaminated Water Diving Manual

User Operation Manuals

ISC APECS Operation Manual

VR3 Quick Reference Manual

US DIVERS Service and Cleaning Manual

AP Inspiration “Vision” Closed Circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

Sentinel Closed Circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

Sofnolime Reference Guide

Azimuth Closed circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

AP Inspiration “Classic” Closed Circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

Drager “Dolphin” Semi Closed Rebreather Manual

Azimuth Closed Circuit Rebreather Brochure

Drager “Ray” Semi Closed Rebreather Manual

Ap Evolution Operation Manual

Ap Inspiration Operation Manual

Nexus Quick Reference Manual

Suunto D6 Owner Manual

Nexus Closed Circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

Reference Material

Reduced Gradient Bubble Model

Deep Diver Workbook

Physics, Physiology, And Medicine Of Diving

Occupational Diving Cometance

Understanding M-Values

Learners guide to CCR

Texas University Diving Saftey

Confessions of a Mortal Diver

Oxygen Toxicity Calculations

Understanding Deep Stops

Understanding Setpoints For CCR

Cave Divers Are Mortal

Rebreather Blunders And Malfunctions

Boom Scenario

Basic Equipment For Cave Diving

Diving Terms and Explanations

Dive Profile Safety

Diving The Hms Repulse

Diving Incident Report Form

So You Want to Technical Dive

Predive Checklist

In Water Recompression

Depth and Gas

Book Reviews

Rebreather Fundamentals

Dive Medic Resource Manual


Rebreather Diver Dies in Malaysia

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

portrait-bitstcl-225x300 Rebreather Diver Dies in Malaysia

Friends of the Singapore National Eye Centre specialist who died in a diving accident on Saturday said he was feeling well before the accident.

One of the divers who tried to resuscitate Dr Marcus Lim recounted the tragedy.

Dr Lim was passionate about photography and he was able to combine this with his love of diving to stunning effect.

On Saturday, he was diving near a shipwreck in the South China Sea. He was honing his skills in preparation for a diving expedition to Antarctica in 2010.

A friend who was there said Dr Lim, who was feeling well before the dive and went down with a group of three others under calm sea conditions, experienced some difficulties after 23 minutes underwater. He was brought to the surface and lost consciousness.

Jay Siak, dive buddy of Dr Lim, said: “CPR was commenced, and the boat set sail for the nearest hospital which is Mersing Hospital. But despite four hours of CPR, we could not revive him.”

The keen sportsman and Liverpool Football Club fan was described by family and friends as level-headed and a loving father.

Heather Lim, a friend of Dr Lim, said: “When we first heard the news, I was completely devastated - just sat up on my bed and started crying. Such a great loss. Such a lovely person.”

Dr Lim leaves behind a three-year old son, Jayden, and his pregnant wife Christy who declined to be filmed. Their baby boy is due to be born next month and Dr Lim had already chosen his name - Tristan

Dr Marcus Lim, 37, was using a device called a rebreather and breathing a mix of gases called trimix - nitrogen, oxygen and helium.


With scuba gear under a burka, French spy Herve Jaubert made his escape from Dubai

Monday, August 24th, 2009

french_spy2_1467337c-300x187 With scuba gear under a burka, French spy Herve Jaubert made his escape from Dubai

On a quiet spring morning, when the Arab villagers were at Friday prayers, Herve Jaubert dragged his rubber dinghy down an empty beach, started the engine, and chugged away to freedom.

As befits a former French naval officer and spy, he had made immaculate preparations for his escape from the United Arab Emirates.

The night before, he claims he had donned wetsuit and scuba diving gear, which had smuggled to him from France in pieces. He dressed himself in women’s clothes, and covered himself with a black abaya, the all-enveloping burka-like robe worn to preserve modesty in the Gulf.

Not a small man, he shuffled awkwardly out of the hotel where he was staying under an assumed name, made his way to the seafront and slipped in.

From there, he swam underwater to the nearby coastguard station, on a remote outpost of the emirate of Fujairah, where he cut the fuel lines on a police patrol boat. He knew it was the only one in the area, and the coast would now be clear.

On his dinghy the next day, it took six hours to reach his destination: a sailing boat, crewed by a fellow former French spy, that was waiting just outside UAE territorial waters.

He clambered aboard, turned the prow towards India, and for the first time since he alleges the Dubai secret police had threatened to insert needles up his nose a year before, felt the fear in his stomach dissipate. He was free.

This, at least, is the remarkable escape story that Mr Jaubert has begun to tell from the safety of his new home in Florida. It will form the centrepiece of a book he is publishing this autumn.

To the Emirati authorities, on the other hand, he is a liar and convicted fraudster.

The publication of his book, Escape from Dubai, is set to be another of the battlegrounds on which the emirate is trying to restore its reputation as a place to do business in the face of the financial crisis.

Although many other foreign businessmen have fallen foul of the Dubai authorities since the first cracks began to appear in its property-led investment boom, none was involved in anything quite as eccentric as the construction of miniature luxury submarines.

That was Mr Jaubert’s business, and his involvement with Dubai began when a man called Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem visited the company he had set up in Florida to serve a speciality tourist market three years after leaving the French secret service, DGSE, in 1993.

Mr bin Sulayem suggested Mr Jaubert might move his work to the Gulf. In the balmy waters off Dubai, filling as it was with luxurious hotels and offshore villa developments in the shape of palm trees or the countries of the world, mini-submarines would be yet another attraction.

It was too good an opportunity to miss. Even when Mr Jaubert arrived, along with his Lamborghini, and found he would not be running his own firm, he was not overly alarmed. He was put in charge of a newly formed subsidiary of the company Mr bin Sulayem chaired, Dubai World, which was also responsible for the emirate’s signature palm-shaped developments.

For a while, life was good. Everything was laid on to the highest quality, he says. The factory built by Dubai World was excellent, finished to the highest standards.

“You could have built an F16 fighter jet there,” Mr Jaubert said.

He lived with his American wife and two children in a villa with private swimming pool.

At weekends, he would speed up the desert highways in his Lamborghini, or take to the sand dunes in one of his two Hummers.

After a couple of years, the boats started coming off the production lines.

Four mini-submarines, a submersible yacht, and, finally, his pride and joy, a larger vessel he called the Nautilus, after the submarine from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, which could carry nine people.

It is from here that accounts begin to differ.

According to a case brought against Mr Jaubert after he fled the country, and which led to his being convicted in his absence and given a jail term of five years this summer, at least two of his submarines did not work.

Auditors investigating the company accounts found gaps, the court was told.

Equipment that Mr Jaubert had ordered from his own company in Florida failed to arrive, or parts were faulty.

All told, he is alleged to have short-changed Dubai World by 14 million dirhams - just over £2 million.

Mr Jaubert claims Dubai World had run into cash flow difficulties, and had come across a central problem with its submarine business plan.

Running them â ” particularly the insurance costs â ” was expensive, and it was not clear who the customers were likely to be. He claims Dubai World wanted to pull out of the venture but first wanted someone to blame.

From 2007, Mr Jaubert underwent lengthy questioning at the hands of both the authorities - the state security or secret police, he says - and Dubai World’s auditors.

It was the police, he said, who threatened to “insert needles into your nose again and again”.

Mr Jaubert has a recording that he said he made on his mobile phone.

“Do you know how painful it is to have needles put inside your nose repeatedly and then twisted around?” the interrogator said. “Do you think you can resist this kind of pain?”

Mr Jaubert made a promise to the auditors to pay back the 14 million dirham, a fact which was to form a central plank of the prosecution case against him. He said he did so only to win himself time.

He was forced to hand in his passport to prevent him leaving the country. After doing so, he made the decision to send his family back to America.

Once they had safely left, Mr Jaubert reverted to his training as a spy to go “underground”, living under assumed identities in a series of Dubai hotels until he was able to escape.

Dubai World is dismissive of Mr Jaubert’s allegations, saying that he is now a convicted fraudster whose stories should not be taken seriously.

A spokesman said: “As with any large enterprise anywhere, from time to time financial wrongdoing is uncovered.

“We take the necessary legal steps when that happens and hand the matter to the police.

“After due and proper legal process, the court found Herve Jaubert guilty of embezzlement and he has been sentenced to five years in prison and ordered to repay 14â million dirham. This is entirely appropriate.” But the organisation is also fighting for its own reputation. Of all Dubai’s numerous government-linked companies, Dubai World is the most closely associated with its rise to glitzy pre-eminence in recent years, and the most closely associated with the debts that have followed.

The property subsidiary that built the Palm islands and the World has to repay a $3.5 billion (£2.1 billion) bond by December, and has not yet said how it is going to do so.

With work on many of its high-profile developments, including the World, slowed or stopped, it is not clear where, other than a government bail-out, the money is going to come from.

A company statement on the Nasdaq Dubai stock exchange website gives Dubai World’s total debts as $59 billion (£35.7 billion).

But it also says that the company’s assets are greater than its liabilities.

As for Mr Jaubert, he is now back in Florida. Although some may see his own greed and ambition as the authors of his misfortune, he denies that he put common sense aside in order to live the good life.

“I am a down-to-earth entrepreneur, and I didn’t do the Dubai glitz and glamour,” he said. “I had my Lamborghini, but I didn’t use it to show off like other people in Dubai. It is 15 years old anyway.”

He says that, of course, knowing he will now never go back. Eight days after leaving the beach in May last year, his small boat finally dropped anchor in Mumbai, more than 1,000 miles to the south-east.

“For a year in Dubai, when I had the authorities after me, when I was going to the police and prosecutors, I lived with fear,” he said.

“I may be a sky diver, a former navy officer, but I had fear in my stomach every day.

“You don’t know how relieved I felt when I reached international waters.”


Are You Ready For Rebreathers?

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

ccr_pool Are You Ready For Rebreathers?

Their stealth and extended bottom times have made rebreathers popular with military and technical divers for many years. Recently, lower prices and “user-friendly” designs have made rebreathers more attractive to recreational divers like you and me. Indeed, several models are aimed specifically at the recreational market.

Is this the future of diving? Are conventional open-circuit rigs bound for the oblivion of duck fins and two-hose regulators? Are you ready for rebreather diving? Are rebreathers ready for you?

Maybe, no, maybe and maybe. At least that’s my guess after spending most of a month studying and diving rebreathers. It turns out they have some very real, valuable advantages over open-circuit, tank-and-regulator systems. But they have some equally real and serious disadvantages too. If you have some unusual needs and are willing to make some sacrifices of time and money, a rebreather can be a godsend. But most divers, for most purposes, will continue to prefer open-circuit scuba for a long time to come.
Why You Might Want a Rebreather

Long dive times. The biggest advantage of a rebreather is gas efficiency. A single fill of a small gas cylinder or cylinders and CO2 scrubber can last for anywhere from one to six hours, depending on which rebreather it is. Unlike open-circuit scuba, your gas duration on a rebreather is nearly independent of depth, so you could, in theory, spend all that time on the bottom.

Of course, a rebreather does not make you immune to DCS and nitrogen narcosis. Those risks remain, though the more sophisticated closed-circuit rebreathers can adjust your gas mix to reduce the DCS risk. The advantage of the rebreather’s long duration for most of us is that you can make several dives on one fill of scrubber and cylinders.

Silence. Rebreathers exhaust few or no bubbles. You don’t hear that roar of exhaust bubbles, and neither do the fish. That allows you to get closer to marine life, which is why rebreathers are popular with professional photographers and some researchers. You won’t be rendered invisible, but you seem to be less alarming to most fish.

Warm, moist breathing gas. The chemical reaction in the CO2 scrubber actually warms and humidifies your breathing gas. Diving with a rebreather does not give you that cotton-mouth feeling and doesn’t chill you as much.

Optimum gas mixture. The more sophisticated rebreathers constantly monitor the partial pressure of oxygen in your breathing mix. They can keep your PPO2 constant regardless of depth or exertion, or alter it on the fly for needs like decompression. The benefit can be less nitrogen uptake and faster offgassing–in other words, more bottom time with less DCS risk. Rebreathers are not created equal, however, and the less-expensive designs do not have this ability.
Why You Might Want To Think Twice

A rebreather failure can go unnoticed. When open-circuit regulators fail, it’s immediately obvious. Either you get no air when you suck on the mouthpiece or (more likely) you get too much and a sudden rush of bubbles in your face.

When a rebreather fails, the signs, if any, are more subtle. You’re still able to inhale and exhale as before because you are just passing the same gas back and forth between your lungs and the breathing loop. The CO2 content in that gas may be rising and the O2 content may be falling, but this won’t be immediately apparent without gauges, monitors and alarms. Rebreather diving is like flying on instruments, not by the “seat of your pants.”

On the other hand, if you watch your instruments and detect the problem promptly, you’ll probably have more time to deal with it on a rebreather than you would on open circuit. You still have gas to breathe, and its oxygen and CO2 content do not change instantaneously.

A rebreather failure can be deadly. A rebreather is constantly mixing the gas in your breathing loop, removing carbon dioxide and adding oxygen. Either component in the wrong proportion is poisonous. Much of the design effort and much of the complexity of rebreathers goes into making that mixing function as accurate and reliable as possible. But it’s never going to reach the certainty of open circuit, where what you breathe is simply what went into the cylinder. An open-circuit “bailout” bottle and regulator is a good idea when diving with conventional gear, but it’s a must with a rebreather.

Cost, weight, bulk, convenience, etc. These minor factors all weigh against rebreathers. Though the cost to buy one is hardly minor, you’re often told that you’ll save money on each dive since you don’t have to refill tanks as often. But you do have to buy scrubber chemicals, and maintenance will cost more. And will that $60 two-tank dive boat give you a rebate if you don’t need to use its tanks? Probably not.

Rebreathers, including the bailout bottle, are generally bulkier and heavier than a single tank and regulator, and they don’t fit well into the tank-rack-and-bungee-cord gear station typical on dive boats. Air travel with cylinders can be a challenge and fills for oxygen and even nitrox can be harder to find, especially in remote locations.

The First Steps

Let’s say you’ve considered the pros and cons and decided you want to dive with a rebreather. What’s the drill?

First is making the decision of which rebreather to buy. Rebreathers differ considerably in not only price but capabilities, the great divide being whether they are closed-circuit or semiclosed-circuit in design.

Closed-circuit rebreathers have the lowest gas consumption, the best mixture control and, generally, the most capability, but are more complex and expensive. Semiclosed-circuit rebreathers are simple, robust and less expensive, with gas consumption rates somewhere between closed-circuit rebreathers and open-circuit scuba.

You might also consider such things as time and depth limits, backups to control devices and fail-safe mechanisms, warranties, how many units have already been in use and for how long, and more.

Then there’s training. A prerequisite will be nitrox certification since rebreathers either use nitrox or, in effect, mix it on the fly. Following that, virtually every rebreather manufacturer will require you to take a rebreather training course lasting four or five days. The cost of this will be extra, normally at least $500. Part of the curriculum covers in-water skills like how to interpret gauges and monitors and how to switch to backup systems. Another part is training in assembly and disassembly, servicing and maintenance of your particular unit.

Because you will have to be trained by an instructor certified in your particular make and model, you may have to travel to another city and stay there for five days or so for your training course.

Meanwhile, you will start to assemble a special tool and spare parts kit. You’ll probably want one or more spare oxygen monitors and various solenoids and sensors for the more complex units. Also gas analyzers and flow-rate test devices, depending on the unit. Add to that mouthpieces, batteries, O-rings, tie-wraps, silicone grease, etc.

A Day on the Water

Even more than open-circuit, a rebreather dive begins before you get wet and ends after you’re dry. Predive and postdive care for the rebreather are essential every time and can’t be skipped. Expect to spend an extra half-hour on each end of the dive.

Here’s generally what to expect, keeping in mind that each rebreather is different and requires its own procedure.

Predive

* Fill cylinder(s). Most semiclosed-circuit rebreathers use a single cylinder of nitrox. You’ll have to decide in advance which nitrox mix you’ll use so the bypass valve orifice can be matched to it. Most closed-circuit rebreathers use two cylinders, of oxygen and a diluent (usually air, though other gases may be options). In either case, but especially when using nitrox, you will analyze the gas yourself to make certain what is in the cylinder. If your bailout system uses a separate cylinder, you may need to refill that also.

# Fill scrubber canister. Different rebreathers use slightly different types of CO2 absorbent and different granule sizes, but all of it looks a lot like cat litter. You buy it in large plastic jugs or buckets, which you must keep tightly sealed because exposure to air causes the absorbent to react and become used up.You’ll pour the absorbent into the canister, tapping the canister occasionally to make sure the absorbent settles and completely fills the canister. Because the absorbent dust is caustic, you should wear gloves and a breathing mask. Then you’ll close and seal the canister and the absorbent bottle or bucket. Many divers do this job at home before the dive trip to minimize the mess.
# Assemble the rebreather. Here, semiclosed- and closed-circuit rebreathers differ considerably. In general, though, you will attach the counterlung (or lungs) to the absorbent canister and install them in the frame of the rebreather. You will test the one-way valves in the breathing hoses and attach them to the counterlungs. You will install the cylinder(s) and check their valves. All this can involve a dozen hose connections.If you have an oxygen monitor and other electronics, you will test them. If you have a constant-flow semiclosed rebreather, you will need to check the flow rate of the orifice.

You will then test the entire unit for air leaks and water leaks. Leaks are potentially serious. You have so little gas on board that you can’t afford to lose any. If water leaks cause the unit to flood, it will become extremely negative. And water in the CO2 scrubber causes a reaction with the absorbent known as a “caustic cocktail”–a nasty mouthful that can chemically burn your lips, mouth and throat.

As should be obvious, this assembly process is both complicated and critical. You need plenty of time and plenty of space to work, and you should use a checklist to prompt your memory. Don’t expect to assemble your rebreather between the dive briefing and the “pool’s open!” call.
# Into the water. Waddling across the deck in a rebreather has been justly compared to carrying double tanks, but once you’re in the water most of the difficulty ceases. Several differences to open-circuit diving will strike you immediately, though.One is that you can’t simply drop the mouthpiece into the water, because water would fill the breathing loop and the scrubber canister. There is a valve on the mouthpiece that you have to remember to close before you take it out of your mouth.

Another is that you can’t affect your buoyancy by inhaling or exhaling, because the same amount of air just passes back and forth between your lungs and the rebreather and never changes volume or buoyancy. If you’re used to exhaling to get below the surface, this won’t work.

As you descend, increasing pressure will collapse the counterlungs just as it collapses BCs and dry suits. Some rebreathers automatically add more gas to the breathing loop, others require you to add it manually. When you suck on the mouthpiece and get no air, you push on a dry suit-type valve to reinflate the breathing loop.

You need to be stingy when inflating your BC or clearing your mask because gas used for that is gas lost from a much smaller total supply. For the same reason, you need to watch your gauges closely and you and your buddy need to be vigilant for air leaks.

If you work unusually hard–if you have to swim against a current, for example–your body will take oxygen out of the breathing loop faster than normal. Closed-circuit systems and passive semiclosed-circuit systems will sense this and add extra oxygen. Active semiclosed systems will not, however. In that case you must remember to “purge the breathing loop” by exhaling this oxygen-poor gas through your nose so the rebreather replaces it with richer gas.

At the beginning of an ascent on a semi-closed-circuit rebreather, you must also purge the loop to enrich your breathing mixture. Otherwise, as pressure drops, the partial pressure of oxygen may become too low. Closed- circuit systems add oxygen automatically.

Also, as you ascend and the counterlungs expand, the rebreather will vent gas. This is the only time the rebreather purposely dumps a significant amount of gas, and the reason that “sawtooth” profiles are especially wasteful. You will probably find that the rebreather does not vent gas fast enough and you become increasingly buoyant, so you’ll need to manually dump from your BC, your dry suit or from the rebreather.

Postdive
If you are planning another dive that day and have enough gas and scrubber time left, all you need to do is turn the rebreather off during your surface interval. It’s a good idea, though, to check the breathing loop for water inside.

If this is your last dive for a few days, you will need to disassemble and clean the rebreather thoroughly. The warm, moist environment inside the breathing loop is perfect for growing bacteria, so it must be disinfected with whatever solution the manufacturer recommends, then rinsed well and dried. Drying the inside of the breathing loop, with its baffles and corrugated hoses, can be very difficult.

If you are diving again tomorrow, however, you need only disinfect the mouthpiece and corrugated hoses.

The used CO2 absorbent must also be dumped and the scrubber canister must be thoroughly cleaned and dried. Electronics and oxygen sensors have their own care requirements. Plan on spending an hour on postdive maintenance at first, although you will get faster with experience.

Long-Term Maintenance

Each cylinder has a first and a second stage regulator which requires annual service. These are normally just ordinary open-circuit regulators that can be serviced by your local dive shop. Cylinders need to be hydro tested and visually inspected like any others.

Oxygen sensors have a life span and need to be replaced, usually every 12 to 24 months, depending on how much they are used. (They deplete themselves in air about half as fast as when diving.) After diving, some divers remove them from the rebreather and seal them to extend their life.

Computer controls have batteries that must be replaced occasionally.

Some manufacturers recommend that the whole unit receive a thorough inspection and overhaul every year.
Rebreathers: How They Work

All rebreathers are built around the principle of a one-way breathing loop. One hose takes your exhaled breath to the CO2 scrubber, and another brings it back (without the CO2) to your mouth.

On each side of the scrubber there is a counterlung, just a flexible bag that expands and contracts to accommodate the on/off nature of your breathing. The counterlung on the exhalation side usually has a relief valve to vent excess gas from the system. The counterlung on the inhalation side has an input valve where more oxygen or nitrox is added.

Add a mouthpiece with a valve to prevent flooding, a one-way valve in each breathing hose so your breath circulates the right way, and some other bits and pieces and you’ve got a basic rebreather.

How many gases are injected into the inhalation counterlung, and how the injection is controlled, determine whether it’s semiclosed-circuit or closed-circuit.

Semiclosed-circuit rebreathers have the simplest gas control mechanism. Basically, it is just a fixed orifice, an opening that permits a constant flow rate into the breathing loop. Any excess above what your body consumes is vented to the water in a stream of small bubbles, which is why the system is called “semiclosed.”

The simplest semiclosed-circuit rebreathers constantly add nitrox from a single cylinder. The Dräger Dolphin and Ray are popular examples. They are called “mass flow” or “active” semiclosed-circuit rebreathers–active because the unit is always injecting fresh gas. The orifice, which controls the flow rate, must be selected before the dive to match the nitrox mix chosen. This type of rebreather is all on or all off: Whenever the cylinder valve is turned on, gas flows into the breathing loop at the rate determined by the orifice. Manual addition valves and some other plumbing may complicate the picture, but that’s the essence.

“Passive” semiclosed-circuit rebreathers inject gas only on demand. Various mechanisms to trigger the gas injection may be used, but they are mechanical. For example, a system of ratchets and levers measures the volume of a counterlung, and when it gets below a certain size (because your body has removed that much oxygen from the breathing loop), it triggers a valve to inject more gas. Passive systems use less gas than active ones, but the actual content of the gas mix in the breathing loop may be more variable.

Somewhat more complicated self-mixing semiclosed-circuit rebreathers add oxygen and a diluent separately through fixed orifices or (in the case of the diluent) a demand valve. They also may use less gas, but may be subject to larger variations in the oxygen content of the gas mix.

Fully closed-circuit rebreathers aim to control exactly the oxygen content in your breathing gas. They add only the gas you need, when you need it, and don’t waste any. Thus, no bubbles most of the time and a longer gas duration. This fine control of gas addition comes from some electronic wizardry. Normally, sensors analyze the oxygen content of the breathing loop and inform a computer, which adds oxygen or diluent as needed to maintain a preselected “set point” for the oxygen partial pressure. Redundancy (often three oxygen sensors and two computers) makes the wiring and plumbing diagrams confusing, but again the concept is fairly simple.

Are You Ready for a Rebreather?

You need to look not only within the rebreather but within yourself. Some personality types are more suited than others to the demands of using and caring for a rebreather. And some people probably shouldn’t even consider it.

Are you comfortable with “nuts and bolts”? Rebreathers are more complex than open-circuit setups, and you will have to be self-sufficient for assembly, cleaning, maintenance and a lot of the repair, since the chances of your local dive shop having a specialist are slim. Even the simplest rebreather typically has all the parts of your open-circuit setup, plus a lot more. All those parts, and the connections between them (there are 50 or more O-rings in a typical rebreather), must have regular maintenance.

Are you self-disciplined? Predive, during the dive and postdive you have to make up your mind to follow procedures and checklists exactly. Filling the scrubber canister and assembling the breathing loop before the dive involve steps that must be followed precisely and tests that can’t be skipped. The same care must be taken when disassembling and cleaning the rebreather after the dive. And during the dive you have to watch gauges more closely than on open circuit. Are you meticulous about maintenance of your open-circuit gear, for example, or do you “hose it and go”?

Do you accept responsibility for your safety? You have to take the attitude that the correct operation of your rebreather depends on you alone. The idea that the manufacturer, the instructor or someone else is responsible may be gratifying to your heirs but will not save your life in the event of a failure. Are you comfortable letting the boat crew or your dive buddy set up your open-circuit gear for you, or do you insist on doing it yourself?

Can you resist temptation? Rebreathers promote what might be called “mission creep.” Many of them are capable of dives far beyond the training of most recreational divers. Units that can change the gas mix during the dive are especially suited for decompression diving. It’s human nature to “see what this baby will do,” but rebreather training is not technical training. You will learn how to operate the unit, but not the specific disciplines of tech diving like deep diving and cave penetration, for example. “Mission creep” can take the apparently innocuous form of adding other nontechnical but demanding equipment too soon. Using a complex camera rig can distract you from monitoring your rebreather carefully, for example.


New Scuba Re-Breather Tech: Test Dive

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

1206scuba_hiw-300x181 New Scuba Re-Breather Tech: Test Dive

By Glenn Harlan Reynolds

Technology is opening all sorts of places to human exploration, including areas of the sea previously too remote to spend much time lingering in. I had occasion to reflect on whether this is a good or a bad thing when I went with a rebreather in the Caribbean last summer. Rebreather technology, though new to me, has been gaining popularity among technically inclined recreational divers — enabling them to dive deeper and for longer periods than with comparably sized, traditional open-circuit scuba systems.

When you inhale using a traditional system, compressed air or nitrox (a blended gas containing more oxygen and less nitrogen than ordinary air) is drawn from a tank to a regulator to your lungs. When you exhale, the air — now containing less oxygen plus carbon dioxide — bubbles out into the water.

Though robust, reliable and inexpensive, open-circuit systems have significant drawbacks. For one, the waste of all that perfectly good oxygen. Inhaled air is about 21 percent oxygen; when you exhale, the oxygen level is still about 15 to 16 percent. In addition, those noisy bubbles can scare fish. (They also make military divers conspicuous when they’d rather not be noticed.)

Rebreathers, in contrast, employ a closed or semiclosed circuit; instead of releasing exhaled air into the water, the system forces it through a chemical scrubber that removes the carbon dioxide. The scrubbed air is then supplemented with oxygen from a small tank, bringing it up to the 21 percent concentration that is easily breathable. Because gas gets compressed as a diver descends, diluent (often ordinary air or trimix, a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen and helium) from another tank maintains the gas volume in the rebreather circuit.

While the concept isn’t entirely new — primitive rebreathers have been around for more than a century — modern technology has made the system much safer and more capable. (Nevertheless, the label on the unit I used read, “DANGER: This device is capable of killing you without warning!”) The development of sensors that provide reliable and accurate measures of oxygen was a major breakthrough. Though rebreathers are a long way from becoming as widely used as open-circuit scuba gear, they have gone from being the exclusive equipment of military and scientific divers to a staple of sophisticated, committed recreational divers.

Wanting to see for myself how the technology has progressed, I contacted Divetech on Grand Cayman Island and asked to be taken on a familiarization dive using the KISS Sport rebreather system.

Several divers told me that most people who go from open-circuit scuba systems to rebreathers find it to be a shock — and the more skilled the diver, the harder the transition. This was certainly true for me. I felt very awkward at first, as many techniques used by experienced open-circuit divers — such as controlling buoyancy by breathing deeper or shallower, depending on whether you want to go up or down — didn’t work with a rebreather. I did get better, though, as the dive progressed.

Frequent diving with a rebreather demands a considerable investment in time and energy — one that I’m not sure I’m ready for, at least right now. Among other things, rebreathers require more maintenance than regular scuba gear because the technology is more complex. The KISS system is a respectable unit that’s been out for a couple of years. It works fine, but looks to me like it was put together as a shop project. The Inspiration system, used by Nat Robb, my instructor at Divetech, is much more sophisticated. It is fully computerized, and its innards look more like a fighter jet’s than a vacuum cleaner’s. It costs $10,000 (compared to $5200 for KISS). But over the coming years, the growing popularity of rebreather diving will no doubt result in falling prices, improved capabilities and, most important, better safety.

My experience with the rebreather got me thinking about the many technological improvements that have made scuba diving safer and more accessible than in the Sea Hunt era. Because of better buoyancy- control devices, regulators, spare-air devices and, especially, dive computers that track nitrogen uptake and bottom time to help divers avoid the bends, more divers are taking up the sport than ever before.

Some people assume that’s a bad thing. All those new people, they figure, will ruin it for everyone. But I’m not so sure. Yes, some sites are overdived, but the big picture is probably more positive. In his recent book, Sprawl, historian Robert Bruegmann notes that interest in preserving the environment took off at about the same time that people began flooding into the suburbs — and getting a little closer to nature.

And ocean explorer Jean-Michel Cousteau, in his foreword to Cathy Church’s book, My Underwater Photo Journey, wrote that if more people were exposed to the beauty and complexity of the undersea world, they’d be much less likely to pollute and destroy it. People who have seen a coral reef up close tend to care more about reefs than people who haven’t.

The instinct of many people who spend time in nature is to wall it off from the great unwashed masses. But I wonder if we would be better off encouraging people to appreciate it. Underwater, at least, advances in technology are doing just that.

Source


Technical Videography Internship

Friday, June 19th, 2009

technical-diving-thailand-39-300x225 Technical Videography Internship

Filming on land has challenges, these are doubled underwater which are further tripled when technical diving.

For the past few months we have been training Christos Kardana on various skills from technical diving to cave diving. Christos left school as a marine biologist and started traveling the world as an underwater videographer traveling to places like Croatia and Indonesia. All this experience taught him much but he soon realized that he was not equal to his equipment and wanted to go down deeper and film longer.

Being as Christos had his own equipment and years of videography experience we developed a course to teach him how to technical dive with a camera.

These was accomplished by first introducing one handed skills by going back into shallow water to repeat his early technical training dives but with a crate in his hand. This crate would change from negative to positively buoyant simulating the change of the weight of the camera at depth. As Christos moved through the skills we gave him an underwater camera and later an underwater SLR camera to try to work on composition while still completing his schedule for decompression diving.

These early skills and techniques will allow Christos to continue his internship at Big Blue Tech where he wants to film a documentary about Groupers which was his thesis topic during his degree scheme research, of which our dive sites have an abundance. These new skills will allow him to film and remain in a single location for much longer than before. Later Christos will move on to semi closed rebreather diving much like the creator of Sharkwater used during his documentary on shark finning.


Don’t Swear Into Helium

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

http://www.bishopmuseum.org/images/Pyle-Profile-Nogi.jpg

Everyone likes Richard Pyle, and we all wish we had is uber sweet CIS Lunar rebreather, but I have to say this video of him down below 100M swearing like a sailer in that Donald Duck voice that you get with a larynx full of helium is pretty funny!

The cool thing about rebreathers is that you can talk into them, and people can understand you. Sure, if sounds like you have a mouth full of rubber (which you do), but you can still be understood. I’m guessing that these guys found a pretty serious thermocline, and the water got a great deal colder than they anticipated.

Pyle is clearly disturbed by this unfortunate turn of events, and spends quite a lot of time swearing and complaining about the cold water. I guess we can’t really blame him for not piling on the thermal protection though. He was, after all off Christmas Island in the Central Pacific Ocean. It’s only five degrease north of the equator, so the water should, in theory, be pretty warm.

Source


Richard Pyle: Exploring the reef’s Twilight Zone

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

In this illuminating talk, Richard Pyle shows us thriving life on the cliffs of coral reefs and groundbreaking diving technologies he has pioneered to explore it. He and his team risk everything to reveal the secrets of undiscovered species.

Ichthyologist Richard Pyle is a fish nerd. In his quest to discover and document new species of fish, he has also become a trailblazing exploratory diver and a pioneer of database technology.

A pioneer of the dive world, Richard Pyle discovers new biodiversity on the cliffs of coral reefs. He was among the first to use rebreather technology to explore depths between 200 and 500 feet, an area often called the “Twilight Zone.” During his dives, he has identified and documented hundreds of new species. Author of scientific, technical and popular articles, his expeditions have also been featured in the IMAX film Coral Reef Adventure, the BBC series Pacific Abyss and many more. In 2005, he received the NOGI Award, the most prestigious distinction of the diving world.

Currently, he is continuing his research at the Bernice P. Bishop Museum, outside Honolulu, Hawai’i, and is affiliated with the museum’s comprehensive Hawaii Biological Survey. He also serves on the Board of Directors for the Association for Marine Exploration, of which he is a founding member. He continues to explore the sea and spearhead rebreather technology, and is a major contributor to the Encyclopedia of Life.


 


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