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Rebreather

May 18, 2011 by Eric Keibler

Technical Training at Local Destinations or Not?

Divers walking to waterRecently I was asked why I don’t do more technical training in the deep lakes in Texas.  My reasoning has to do with both philosophy and the environment. 

First, let’s look at the environment itself.  The lakes have the advantage of being close allowing for short drives from home. To some, this helps keep the training costs lower, especially if you can camp near the lake.  They are familiar dive sites to many of the divers in the area so there is an increased comfort level which is beneficial for the student.  The problem with the lakes is that they are generally not very clear because of sediment and algae.  Because of the reduced visibility, class sizes are limited, which is not a bad thing, and students are forced to swim very close to one another or on a line.  While following a line is a good skill to learn, it inhibits the diver’s ability to fully integrate the skills and procedures into their diving.

The deeper lakes also tend to be cold at depth.  To properly train in this environment, the student needs a drysui or at a minimum a thick wetsuit.  This requires that they be comfortable with drysuit diving before the course starts because starting a technical diving program introduces more equipment and skills so adding a suit that the diver is not familiar with diving adds more complications to an already stressful situation.

This is not to say that a student cannot learn in this environment.  There are many skilled and successful divers who started their training in murky local lakes and quarries.  However, it takes more effort to become proficient in less than ideal conditions.

The second reason I prefer other locations is one of philosophy.  Beginning down the road of technical diving requires that the student develop skills, intuition, and procedures to survive and enjoy the dives.  Swimming with multiple cylinders whether manifolded or separate, as in a side mount configuration, or even on a rebreather requires that you retrain your brain to deal with different buoyancy characteristics and with mass.  I find that students master these skills faster, with more confidence, when they can see what they are doing in relation to their instructor and fellow students.  Further, by allowing them to have more room between them, they can develop better swimming and buoyancy skills in a shorter period of time.  Additionally, with clearer visibility, the stress on the instructor is reduced which I believe makes me more effective in the learning environment.

I also believe that students start this type of diving to do something or to go somewhere.  Some take it merely for the training, but moreover the student has a goal in mind when they enroll in a course.  I have yet to find someone who came to me saying they wanted to find out what the mud looked like at the bottom of Lake Travis.  Diving is about experiences and in my mind it should be predominately positive experiences.

This is not to say that these locations do not have their place in technical diving.  Before leaving for a destination, open water, I like to take the students to one of the shallow training lakes.  This allows them to refine their equipment configurations and develop some buoyancy skills in their new equipment.  You don’t need deep water to work on buoyancy; in fact, it is better to work on it in a shallow area because the trim changes are magnified.  Additionally, these locations allow me to teach some of the skills needed for this type of diving and the start helping them create procedures to deal with equipment and to start building more diving intuition.

For the final dives, I find it to be a more positive experience to go where the water is clear and there is depth and support for the type of diving you are learning.  Since we have completed the knowledge or classroom portion of the course and some basic skills dives prior to leaving for the destination, we can concentrate on the diving and planning when we arrive.

One argument against completing the open water divers in a destination rather than a local lake is the cost.  However, once you figure in the cost of fuel, lodging, meals, entry fees, etc.  The differences are not that great.  By electing to complete your training in a destination like Grand Cayman or Cozumel you will have a better experience and will enjoy the dives more.  Additionally, I believe you will learn faster and progress in this style of diving further because you have a solid foundation on which to build.

Filed Under: Caribbean, Dry Suit Diving, Open Circuit, Rebreathers, Scuba Dive Training, Scuba Diving Activities, Scuba Diving Equipment, Travel, Trimix Tagged With: Rebreather, Technical Diving, Technical Diving.Rebreather Diving, Training, Trimix

February 25, 2011 by David Snyder

Dave Talks About Rebreathers – Part 4, Training and Why


Rebreather Diver on Ghost Mountain in Grand Cayman
Q: I have and always will promote relaying on ones training and skills. I myself solo dive, as I did this last Sunday. My reasons are my own, and many times I get looks from instructors with their classes.

A: No training agency sanctions solo diving with a rebreather.  All training is done with an emphasis on buddy teams. You are taught to brief open circuit buddies on rescue procedures specific to rebreather divers.
That said, you are responsible for yourself. Accident avoidance is the best strategy. As I said before most accidents can be traced back to events or actions of a rebreather diver on the surface. Buddies should be there for random chance events such as a shark biting your leg not for your failure set your unit up correctly and monitoring during the dive. Units setup properly simply work as designed 99.999% of the time. Paying attention during the dive allows one to recognize problems and take action before an accident occurs.
As a note, to break the chain of events leading to an accident due to unit or diver failure, you simply bailout to open circuit and abort the dive. All rebreather divers carry bailout bottles and are trained to use them.
Q: Why use a rebreather?
A: Rebreathers by there nature do two things very well. First is gas logistics. With a rebreather you can stay down 5 plus hours with two 20cf2 bottles at any depth. The second and much more important to fish people is no bubbles. Your interaction with the critters of the sea is much different. With a rebreather you are one of them now. Not some big noisy thing to be avoided. That is why photographers are beginning to use them. I have sat a cleaning station and had my hand cleaned by little shrimp. Swam in a school of marlin having to push them out of the way. Way cool and at 40 feet of less.
A rebreather is a tool that is used in order to accomplish a result. Just like your regulators. Think of it as such.

Filed Under: Rebreathers Tagged With: Rebreather, Technical Diving, Technical Diving.Rebreather Diving

January 28, 2011 by David Snyder

Dave Talks About Rebreathers – Part 3

 


Rebreather divers on the Carrie Lee in Grand Cayman
Q: When did you start using a rebreather?

A: The key question that I had to answer before I began using a rebreather was,  “Why do divers die on a rebreather.” The short answer is rebreather divers die when they forget or stop believing that the laws of physics apply to them.
 
Q: But when the above mentioned have failed for one reason or another, the next law implied should be survival. Would not the presence of a partner/buddy in close proximity of you, help?
A: Rebreathers are not complex machines but they do require one to setup them properly. Most accidents can be traced to actions or inactions on the surface. Even that, most times does not kill divers, it then takes ignoring warning signs. Generally a rebreather setup properly just works. Monitor it and you will be fine. From the accidents I have been able to research 99% have been diver error. When I use my rebreather I always tell myself the laws of physics still apply to me and complacency and stupidity kills. The definition of an accident is the lost of control. Typically there is a series of events each of itself not causing a loss of control but together causes an accident. Breaking the chain of events prevents the accident. When using a rebreather this is done by paying attention and following your training.
Q; When I dive with my partner/buddy, I have to be honest, I feel as though I am somewhat responsible for his safety, and he mine.
A: When I dive with someone I tell them that no matter what, I am coming back safely. Implied by that is I will drag their sorry butt back also, but I need to know where they are at.

Filed Under: Rebreathers, Scuba Diving Equipment Tagged With: Rebreather, Technical Diving.Rebreather Diving, Training

December 1, 2010 by Eric Keibler

Escape the Winter Cold, Let’s Go Scuba Diving in January!

Eric Underwater in cozumelIt is sometimes hard for me hard to believe that I used to be an avid skier.  In college, I spent a number of weekends, a week around Christmas and Spring Break skiing.  It was fun, exhilarating and challenging.   My underwater camera saw more frozen moisture than liquid.
After mneung to Houston in…well let’s not go there…I changed from a skier to a sailor and a diver.  White powdery slopes were replaced by soft sand beaches, boats, bikinis, dive equipment and clear blue water.  Oh, and yes the warm weather.
Winters in Houston are a far cry from the cold wind-blown snow and ice of Lubbock, but I still find that winters can be cold.  I guess I have just gotten used to the warmth so the mild winters here seem cold to me at times. 
Despite the executives from Continental trading in their shorts and t-shirts for wool sweaters, wool pants and poly-propylene long underwear, Houston remains the gateway to the Caribbean and the soft sand and clear blue waters I discovered later in life.  In the Caribbean there is plenty of warmth to go around and diving on some of the worlds most beautiful reefs.  The walls stretch for miles down the coasts and in some places for miles down as well.
While Bing Crosby is singing “Let It Snow…” I am picturing a boat parked over a tropical reef, the top of the reef opening up eighty feet below me with the nearby wall plunging down 400 feet and the current guiding me along this natural aquarium.  The fish are swimming, feasting in the current and the corals are gently swaying in the water.
The easiest place to go for a long weekend is Cozumel, Mexico a limestone island once home to the Mayan Oracle and a Mayan pilgrimage destination.  Cortez removed the Oracle and used the island as a staging area for his conquest of Mexico.
Jacques Cousteau helped make the island a diving Mecca when he first visited the island in 1960.  He found the sleepy little island a paradise above and below the water.  Of course he probably would not recognize the Cozumel of today with 2 cruise ship terminals which can accommodate up to six ships.  The current economic slowdown in the United States has thankfully reduced the number of ships visiting the island but unfortunately to the detriment to the local people.
Cozumel is the home of the second Marine Park founded in Mexico and is the first not to allow local fisherman to spear fish or line fish on the reefs.  The primary industry in Cozumel is tourism with divers making up a large part of the tourist business, especially with the reduced cruise ship traffic.
Parrot FishThe reefs, which took a beating in Hurricane Gilbert are still beautiful.  The southern end of the island has steep walls and beautiful corals and fish, while the North end of the island was sloping walls and fast currents with up and down currents to boot.  For rebreather divers especially, the areas without the up and down currents are more enjoyable and my favorite dives are in the vicinity of Palancar Gardens and Palancar Caves.  It is really special to come up from the stark limestone depths into a garden of colour and lives, swirling around you as you swim in, out and around the pillars of coral.  You float along, the currents carrying you along toward the north (generally) with the scene constantly changing and renewing the colour and life.
Hmm, I think I need to go diving!  Luckily for me, the travel department at Oceanic Ventures, namely Ann, has put together a long weekend in Cozumel so I can complete some training for some students who are also looking forward to warm water and wetsuits instead of the cold water and dry suits I have been making them use for training up to this point.  But, despite my being involved in a training class, there are a number of people who, like me, want to escape the cold and enjoy some warm tropical breezes.
If you can get away, you are welcome to join us in Mexico 13-17 January 2011.  If you cannot make it this time, keep your head warm and remember someone else is staying warm for you.

Filed Under: Caribbean, Marine Life, Rebreather, Scuba Diving Activities, Travel, Trimix Tagged With: Continental, Cozumel, diving, Rebreather, Skiing, Trimix

April 3, 2008 by Eric Keibler

Ulterior Motives…

Eric Rebreather HEad on BenchMy visit to Delta P was for more than a tour.  Al had arranged for me to spend some time with Jason, so I could complete a Sentinel Technician Course.  My purpose was to be more familiar with the unit and its components so I could handle the common and not so common field repairs.

 

We started b completely disassembling my unit all the way down to its basic components.  Jason then went through a step-by-step procedure for assembling the unit from the ground up.  Along the way, he explained some of their ideas in designing this rebreather and comparing it to their other, more expensive unit, the Oroborus.

 

Jason was an excellent teacher.  He was patient with me and took the time to show me a more professional way to do things.  At one point he told me, a professional uses the bench rather than manipulating things at chest level.  There is a greater chance of damaging things when you are trying to hold them and work with them rather than keeping them on the bench and using the tools and leverage to your advantage.

 

The Sentinel is a rather simple device with some surprising mechanical twists designed to make it safer for the end user.  They have given divers using their products a great deal of thought and have tried to build a straight forward machine that allows for flexibility and customization in the diver interface but not in the basic operation.  The unit features a custom designed back plate and wing that can be substituted for a more conventional backplate and wing if desired,

 

As I reassembled my unit, I was continually amazed with the design features incorporated into the unit.  It is apparent that the design team build on the success of their other unit and the experience of a number of divers inside and outside of the Company.

 

Of course, I was responsible for re-building my unit, so I hope I was a good student.  I guess I’ll find out in a few weeks.

Filed Under: Rebreather Tagged With: Delta P, Rebreather, repair, technician

March 30, 2008 by Eric Keibler

Who said a Taxi driver knows the way?

Eric Underwater on his Sentinel RebreatherIt all ended with a series of Ian, can you ask him to turn around?  The dive shop and the hotel are in the other direction; we just passed them. And later, I don’t think he knows where the airport is… just keep going, I think I see the sign up ahead.  Of course these two events were broken up by lunch and a lie by the pool all after getting off the boat and experiencing more of the Egyptian governmental efficiency – he wanted to know if I had any cigarettes, when I explained that I did not smoke he wanted to know if I had a lighter.  Since I did not smoke, I had no lighter so everyone needs to bring all of their luggage in.  This was followed by some more arguing between the officials and our driver, the luggage being x-rayed by an operator who was talking to another official and who did not even bother to look at the monitor, re-loading the van, more yelling and off for “the hotel.”

 

 

It was a full week.  The routine was assembly and diving during the day, lectures at night, and a written test in my spare time.  All-n-all it was an interesting week.  The diving was less than spectacular, the scenery was a little bland (except for the Russians) but the company was fun and the Rebreather was interesting.

 

Kevin noted that while we had a number of issues with the units, at the end of the week all twenty of the units were still divable — albeit the units had a variety of failures from secondary handsets staying on or not working, temperature monitors (TPM) not functioning, and high pressure sensors either failing or giving erratic results.  He had been on tests of other units where the failure rate was 50% to 100% before the week was out.

 

My own personal unit had a secondary handset failure, a non-functioning TPM and an oxygen sensor that went in and out and gave erratic reading when it was functioning.  I am planning on visiting the factory and taking a technician course so I hope to learn more about these failures.

Filed Under: Middle East, Rebreather Tagged With: Rebreather, Red Sea, Sentinel, Travel

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