Scuba
Diving Equipment
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Scuba diving
mask, full face diving masks, scuba diving helmets,
scuba diving prescription masks
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Choosing Your Scuba
Diving Equipment
Before taking up scuba
diving as a recreational sport, it is important that you get
yourself the necessary scuba equipment and gear.
There are
many options available but if you're a beginner, it's best
to start from the basics such as the mask, fins, snorkel,
and weight belt, then move on to advanced sets later.
The Basics: The
scuba
diving equipment diving mask allows you to see underwater through the
glass plate in front.
Most diving masks are
constructed in such a way that a user can breathe out into the mask. This
prevents the "squeeze" during the descent caused by
pressure.
Choose a scuba
diving equipment mask that properly fits your face and
forms a seal. Most scuba diving masks come with a rubber or
silicone "skirt" that creates
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a watertight seal with the
diver's face. There are several types of diving masks such as full face
diving masks that allow underwater verbal communication,
diving helmets using surface supplied scuba
diving equipment etc.
Prescription masks are also available for people who wear
prescription glasses. |
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The Fins allow you to move freely underwater and should
perfectly fit the feet. It should neither be too tight nor
too loose which can hamper swimming capabilities, be very
uncomfortable and even dangerous while taking a dive. The
snorkel lets you breathe at the surface
without raising your |

Diving with snorkel and fins |
head
from the water, and should be no lesser than 30 cm
in length. The weight belt helps you maintain
buoyancy so you should consider getting one if
you're a beginner.
Diving suits like Wetsuits and Dry suits provide thermal
insulation and prevent complications such as hypothermia.
Remember that water conducts heat 25 times faster than air
from the body. So, choose a suit depending on how warm or
cold your diving water is going to be. |
Scuba Sets:
There are two main types of
scuba
diving equipment sets - open-circuit and
closed-circuit.
Most scuba divers use standard air - 21% Oxygen, 79%
Nitrogen - for their open-circuit scuba sets, which is much
more cost-effective than using mixtures such as heliox and
trimix. The open-circuit scuba set (also known as Aqualung)
itself is quite simple so is also cheaper and more popular
than other types. Basically, the user breathes in from the
scuba
diving equipment set and out to waste, with the
scuba
diving equipment gas cylinder worn on the
back. There are 2- and 3 backpack cylinders open-circuit
scuba sets available.
Closed-circuit scuba
diving equipment sets use rebreathers. In this system,
exhaled air is reprocessed by the rebreather to make it fit
for re-inhalation. This can be very economical for people
who need to take long dives. The three types of rebreathers
include oxygen, semi-closed circuit and fully-closed circuit
rebreathers.
Accessories you should consider:
Regulator and Buoyancy Compensator (BC) - The
scuba
diving equipment regulator,
which carries the air from your cylinder, should be equipped
with a gauge and second mouthpiece. The scuba
diving equipment Buoyancy
Compensator, such as such as a back-mounted wing or
stabilizer jacket, is crucial for neutral buoyancy to
control depth.
Dive watch: Electronics like a dive watch comes in quite
handy when measuring your time and depth underwater. A dive
computer is also available for the same purpose which is
more accurate but more expensive.
If you plan to really move head with your scuba
diving equipment, scuba diving
adventure, consider getting other useful accessories such as
underwater light, a surface marker-buoy (SMB), a knife, and
a compass etc. Experienced divers, Scuba Dive centers,
websites, magazines, etc will all be able to assist you when
searching for the right scuba diving equipment and
accessories.
About the Author Carl Walker
Scuba Diving HQ. Articles, tips and information about scuba
diving.
Diving
and oxygen - ABC of Oxygen
All
organisms require oxygen for metabolism, but the
oxygen in water is unavailable to mammals. Divers
(and diving mammals such as whales and seals) are
entirely dependent on the oxygen carried in the air
in their lungs or their gas supply. Divers also have
a paradoxical problem with oxygen. At higher partial
pressures oxygen causes acute toxicity leading to
convulsions. To understand the diver's narrow knife
edge between fatal hypoxia and fatal hyperoxia we
need to recall some of the physical properties of
gases.
Physics
At sea level atmospheric pressure is 1 bar absolute
(1 standard atmosphere = 101 kPa = 1.013 bars). The
weight of the atmosphere exerts a pressure which
will support a column of water 10 m high; 10 m under
water the pressure on a diver is 200 kPa. The volume
of gas in an early diving bell full of air at sea
level is halved at 10 m according to Boyle's law; at
20 m pressure is 300 kPa absolute and the gas is
compressed into one third the volume.
Dry air is composed of roughly 21% oxygen, 78%
nitrogen, and 1% other gases. According to Dalton's
law the partial pressure of oxygen at any depth will
be 21% of the total pressure exerted by the air and
the partial pressure of nitrogen will be 78% of
total pressure.
Gases dissolve in the liquid with which they are in
contact. Nitrogen is fat soluble and at sea level we
have several litres dissolved in our bodies, if the
partial pressure of nitrogen is doubled (by
breathing air at 10 m depth) for long enough for
equilibration to take place we will contain twice as
many dissolved nitrogen molecules as at sea level.
The effect of the increased partial pressures of
oxygen is more complex. Doubling our inspired
partial pressure of oxygen doubles the amount of
oxygen in solution but does not double the amount of
oxygen in the body since a large part of our oxygen
content is bound to oxygen carrying pigments. The
haemoglobin in arterial blood is virtually saturated
at an inspired partial pressure of oxygen
(Fi[O.sub.2]) of 21 kPa, and increasing the partial
pressure of oxygen has little effect on the amount
of oxygen bound to haemoglobin.
Breath hold diving
An average healthy person with no special
training can hold his (or her) breath for about half
a minute. During the breath hold the oxygen
content of tissues decreases, but the breath hold is
broken as a result of carbon dioxide production and
resulting acidosis, which stimulates the respiratory
centre. With practice you can resist the stimulus to
breathe for longer but it remains carbon dioxide
accumulation that causes release of the breath hold,
now the scuba
diving equipments are coming in.
The breath hold can be extended further by
hyperventilation immediately beforehand.
Hyperventilation has little effect on the oxygen
content of the body but blows off carbon dioxide so
that you start with a higher cerebrospinal fluid pH.
Hyperventilation does not alter the rates of oxygen
consumption and carbon dioxide production, but the
lower initial carbon dioxide content means that the
hypoxic stimulus triggers respiration before the pH
of the cerebrospinal fluid falls enough to do so. It
may be possible to hold a breath for over 5 minutes
by hyperventilation on 100% oxygen. The
hyperventilation reduces the body's carbon dioxide
content but does not affect oxygen content much, but
the Fi[O.sub.2] of 100 kPa considerably increases
the total oxygen content.
Hyperventilation before diving enables breath
hold divers to stay down longer but is very
dangerous. The diver starts with a low carbon
dioxide content, a high pH, and a normal oxygen
tension. During descent to, say, 30 m, the pressure
increases fourfold, compressing the airspaces to one
quarter their surface volume (from total lung
capacity of 61 to 1.51, near residual volume). The
partial pressures of oxygen and nitrogen in the
alveoli also increase fourfold and produce
corresponding increases in arterial and tissue gas
tensions. The alveolar carbon dioxide pressure does
not change much because there is little carbon
dioxide in the lungs at this point and the body has
considerable buffering capacity. During the dive
oxygen is consumed and carbon dioxide is produced.
Because of the hyperventilation the diver does not
feel the need to breathe until the arterial oxygen
tension has fallen to levels which stimulate the
carotid chemoreceptors. As the diver ascends
hydrostatic pressure is reduced fourfold with a
fourfold reduction in oxygen tensions in alveolar
gas, arterial blood, and tissues. The rapidly
falling cerebral oxygen pressure may be inadequate
for consciousness to be maintained and the diver
could drown during ascent.
The danger of hyperventilation applies to all
breath hold divers, including snorkel divers and
people swimming lengths underwater in pools. The
reduction in oxygen pressure when coming to the
surface from the bottom of a 2 m deep pool can be
enough to cause unconsciousness, and some children
have died this way.
Scuba
and surface supplied diving
Air
The most available and cheapest gas to use for
scuba (self contained underwater breathing
apparatus-scuba
diving equipment) or surface supplied diving
is air. It can be compressed easily using simple
machines. Air is less likely to produce a fatal
mixture than gas mixing but has several
disadvantages. With the high partial pressures at
depth nitrogen affects the function of cell
membranes causing nitrogen narcosis. Mild impairment
of intellectual function may occur at only 30 m,
with progressive impairment of function as the diver
descends and unconsciousness at depths near 100 m.
The nitrogen that dissolves in the tissues at
depth also needs to be liberated on ascent or
decompression. Because nitrogen is highly soluble a
large volume of gas may be involved. If the rate of
decompression (ascent) is too rapid large amounts of
bubbles are liberated from the supersaturated
tissues. For most air dives the rate of ascent
should be no faster than 10-15 m/min. For some deep
or long dives decompression stops are performed to
allow gas to be released without excessive formation
of bubbles in vulnerable tissues. Small amounts of
bubbles are common after innocuous dives, but too
many bubbles or bubbles in the wrong place cause
decompression illness. Even breath hold divers who
repeatedly dive to 20-30 m for a couple of minutes
with shorter surface breaks between can accumulate
enough nitrogen to develop decompression illness at
the end of the day.
Nitrogen is a relatively dense gas, which
makes the work of breathing at 30 m depth twice as
great as at the surface. A breathing system using
air requires that the exhaust gas (low in oxygen and
high in carbon dioxide and nitrogen) be liberated as
bubbles. This can be a problem in military covert
operations or defusing naval mines with acoustic
sensors.
Oxygen
Several approaches have been developed with scuba
diving equipment to deal with the problems
of nitrogen. The first was to breathe 100% oxygen
using a rebreathing system with a carbon
dioxide absorber. The diver breathes into and out of
a bellows-like counterlung with the oxygen
supply topped up from a scuba
diving equipment cylinder and absorption of
carbon dioxide.
Divers breathing pure oxygen need to carry much
smaller amounts of gas and produce no bubbles, but
there are problems, some of which can be fatal.
When a diver starts breathing from an scuba
diving equipment oxygen rebreather the
fraction of inspired nitrogen is zero. The diver's
body contains several litres of dissolved nitrogen,
and the pressure gradient causes this nitrogen to
pass back to the lung and into the counterlung. The
oxygen is consumed, carbon dioxide is removed, and
nitrogen accumulates, gradually reducing the
percentage of oxygen in the counterlung. This can
lead to unconsciousness. Flushing the system with
pure oxygen periodically overcomes this problem, but
high partial pressures of oxygen increase blood
pressure and reduce heart rate. These effects are,
however, small and reversible.
Prolonged breathing of a gas with an
Fi[O.sub.2] greater than 60 kPa can lead to
pulmonary toxicity and eventually irreversible
pulmonary fibrosis, but this takes many hours or
days. At an Fi[O.sub.2] greater than 160 kPa acute
oxygen toxicity can occur within minutes causing
convulsions with little or no warning. A
convulsion underwater is usually fatal. The
higher the Fi[O.sub.2] the greater the risk.
Breathing air containing 21% oxygen risks acute
oxygen toxicity at depths greater than 66 m;
breathing 100% oxygen there is a risk of convulsion
at only 6 m.
Nitrox
Amateur divers increasingly breathe a
nitrogen-oxygen (nitrox) mixture with scuba
diving equipment. Almost any mixture can be
made, but a typical example is nitrox 40, which
consists of 40% oxygen and 60% nitrogen. (The number
always denotes the percentage of oxygen.) The
reduced nitrogen content compared with air increases
the time the diver can stay on the bottom without
getting decompression illness on surfacing. The
trade off is that there is a risk of convulsion
from acute oxygen toxicity if the diver descends too
deep; for nitrox 40 that would be deeper than 30
m.
Mixed gases
For dives deeper than 66 m the gas mixture should
contain less than 21% oxygen to avoid the risk of
acute oxygen toxicity. The general rule is to
try to achieve a gas mixture giving an Fi[O.sub.2]
of about 140 kPa. At 130 m depth in the northern
sector of the North Sea oil field, the ambient
pressure is 1400 kPa, so the breathing mixture used
contains 10% oxygen. On the deepest working dives,
at depths greater than 600 m, ambient
pressure is greater than 6100 kPa and the divers
breathe gas mixtures containing about 2% oxygen to
avoid acute oxygen toxicity. A lung full of gas
containing 2% oxygen at 600 m contains about six
times as many molecules of oxygen as a lung full of
air at sea level. On deep dives the composition of
the gas breathed is changed several times during
descent and ascent.
Which gases should be used to dilute the oxygen
on deep dives? The choice requires a compromise
which takes into account the various properties of
possible gases. Helium is commonly used with oxygen
(heliox), even though helium is expensive and has a
high thermal conductivity, which potentiates heat
loss and can make hypothermia a serious
Recompression facilities
An emergency 24 hour telephone number for diving
emergencies exists at HM Dockyard, Portsmouth.
It will advise on the nearest available
recompression facility. Tel: 01705 818888.
possibility on deep dives. Helium molecules are
small so that the work of breathing is low even at
great depths. It is relatively insoluble in lipids,
minimising bubble liberation on decompression. Its
insolubility means that it lacks narcotic effects,
but this unmasks another problem of diving deep, the
high pressure nervous syndrome. This syndrome is
believed to be the direct effect of pressure
exciting neurones. Adding a small amount of a
narcotic gas such as nitrogen can ameliorate some of
the symptoms but this is not the entire answer and
other experimental gases are used.
Amateur sport diving
Non-specialist doctors are unlikely to have much
involvement with commercial divers, but most
general practitioners will have amateur divers among
their patients. Each year in Britain there are
about 12 deaths and 100 cases of serious
decompression illness requiring recompression. Most
occur because divers failed to follow accepted
safety precautions, equipment failed, or disease
placed the diver at risk. Several organisations
train sport divers in clubs and commercial schools.
Instructors take new divers through basic theory and
pool training to progressively more challenging and
deeper open water dives. The trainee should be
certified as competent before being allowed to
undertake dives in the company of another diver
without an instructor. Further training is needed
before the qualified diver can progress to more
adventurous diving.
Before anyone is allowed to start diving, and
periodically when diving, they have to pass a
diving medical examination to ensure freedom
from diseases which might predispose to incapacity
in the water or to diving related illnesses. The
requirements for amateurs in all diving clubs in the
United Kingdom are laid out in a common medical
form.
Lung disease in divers is a particular problem.
Significant lung disease which impairs exercise
performance and the ability to cope with physically
demanding conditions is obviously a contraindication
to diving. Asymptomatic lung disease which does not
affect exercise capacity is also a problem. Any lung
disease which causes generalised or localised gas
trapping (such as emphysema, bullae, cavities) may
predispose to pulmonary barowauma during ascent,
even when the ascent rate is less than 10-15 m/min.
During ascent from a dive the gas in a bulla
increases as ambient pressure is reduced. If the
bulla cannot empty adequately during the ascent it
will burst causing local lung damage, pneumothorax,
surgical emphysema, or arterial gas embolism. Gas in
a pneumothorax will expand as pressure is reduced,
causing a tension pneumothorax.
In the United Kingdom people with mild asthma who
satisfy criteria laid down by the United Kingdom
Sport Diving Medical Committee may be approved to
dive by a medical referee. In some countries anyone
with a history of asthma, even childhood asthma
decades before, is not permitted to dive. Ironically
those countries allow smokers to dive, yet a long
term heavy smoker with evidence of small airways
disease on flow-volume loops is probably at greater
risk of pulmonary barotrauma than a patient with
mild asthma who has never smoked.
There are also medical standards for
non-respiratory diseases. People are advised not
to dive if they have a condition which may cause
incapacity in the water--for example, epilepsy or
cardiac arrythmias--or predispose to diving related
diseases. Intracardiac shunts predispose to
decompression illness and hypertension predisposes
to diving induced pulmonary oedema.
Characteristics of types of decompression illness
Causes Neuro- Cardio-
logical respiratory
Paradoxical gas Severe Mild
embolism--
cardiothoracic shunt
Arterial gas embolism after
pulmonary barotrauma:
Lung disease Mild Mild
Rapid ascent Mild Mild
Gas nucleation caused by Mild Mild
unsafe decompression
profile
Causes Skin Joint
Paradoxical gas Severe None
embolism--
cardiothoracic shunt
Arterial gas embolism after
pulmonary barotrauma:
Lung disease None None
Rapid ascent None None
Gas nucleation caused by None Severe
unsafe decompression
profile
Recompression facilities
An emergency 24 hour telephone number for diving
emergencies exists at HM Dockyard, Portmouth. It
will advise on the nearest available recompression
facility. Tel. 01705 818888.
Symptoms of high pressure nervous syndrome
* Impaired intellectual function
* Tremor
* Myoclonus
* Fits
Courses on diving and hyperbaric medicine
Institute of Naval Medicine, Alverstoke, Gosport,
Hampshire PO 12 2DL (tel: 01705 768091)
Hyperbaric Medicine Unit, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary,
Aberdeen AB25 2ZN (tel: 01224 681818)
British amateur scuba diving organisations
British Sub-Aqua Club, Telford's Quay, Ellesmere
Port, Cheshire L65 4FY (tel: 0151 350 6200)
Scottish Sub-Aqua Club, Cockburn Centre, 40 Bogmoor
Place, Glasgow G51 4TQ (tel: 0141 425 1021)
Sub-Aqua Association, Bear Brand Complex, Allerton
Road, Liverpool L25 7SF (tel: 0151 428 9888)
These organisations have a panel of doctors
throughout the United Kingdom (and a few places
elsewhere) who are diving medical referees and who
will advise on fitness to dive and about diving
related diseases
Further reading
* Sport diving. The British Sub-Aqua Club diving
manual. 11th ed. London: Stanley Paul, 1993.
* Bove AA, Davis JC. Diving medicine. 2nd ed.
Philadelphia: WB Saunders, 1990.
Peter Wilmshurst is consultant cardiologist at Royal
Shrewsbury Hospital, Shrewsbury, and a member of the
UK Sport Diving Medical Committee.
The ABC of Oxygen is edited by Richard M Leach,
consultant physician, and John Rees, consultant
physician, Guy's and St Thomas's Hospital Trust,
London.
British Medical Journal by Peter Wilmshurst
COPYRIGHT British Medical Association
& Gale Group
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Scuba diving
mask, full face diving masks, scuba diving helmets,
scuba diving prescription masks, scuba diving fins,
snorkel, scuba diving weight belt,
buoyancy, wetsuits, drysuits, hypothermia, scuba
sets - open-circuit and closed-circuit, standard
air, oxygen, nitrogen, aqualung, backpack cylinders,
air tank, rebreathers, exhaled air, re-inhalation,
regulator and buoyancy compensator, dive watch, dive
computer, underwater light, surface
marker-buoy (SMB), knife, compass, experienced
divers, scuba dive centers, diving equipment, diving
accessories. |
Scuba diving mask, full face diving masks, scuba diving
helmets, scuba diving prescription masks, scuba diving fins,
snorkel, scuba diving weight belt, buoyancy, wetsuits,
drysuits, hypothermia, scuba sets - open-circuit and
closed-circuit, standard air, oxygen, nitrogen, aqualung,
backpack cylinders, air tank, rebreathers, exhaled air,
re-inhalation, regulator and buoyancy compensator, dive
watch, dive computer, underwater light, surface marker-buoy
(SMB), knife, compass, experienced divers, scuba dive
centers, diving equipment, diving accessories
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