View Full Version : This could change SCUBA as we know it.
This is some really cool stuff!
http://themindunleashed.org/2014/01/revolutionary-scuba-mask-creates-breathable-oxygen-underwater.html
Revolutionary Scuba Mask Creates Breathable Oxygen Underwater On Its Own
http://themindunleashed.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/breathablee.jpg
Tango589
01-19-14, 01:50 PM
That sounds cool, but wouldn't you need some sort of emergency back-up in case you were down deep and the device failed?
Schroeder
01-19-14, 01:51 PM
That sounds cool, but wouldn't you need some sort of emergency back-up in case you were down deep and the device failed?
Do you have one for your regular scuba gear?;)
Do you have one for your regular scuba gear?;)
Indeed. Backup in such an unforgiving environment is an absolute must.
My question is how they're gonna get around oxygen toxicity under pressure.
Aktungbby
01-19-14, 02:23 PM
That sounds cool, but wouldn't you need some sort of emergency back-up in case you were down deep and the device failed?
A pony leg tank strapped next to the ankle knife; Gives you 5 to ten minutes extra. Actually had to do a hundred foot ascent off Maui with no air (stupid assigned partner)...by the book...so you don't embolize in the alveoli!:dead: Get calm, look up to straighten passages, and don't rise faster than the bubbles and Don't stop breathing in and out(exhaling is critical) even if just to rebreathe the residual amount in your own lungs. since most of my older buddies and instructors have eventually gotten bends, I just keep it above 30 feet these days so the nitrogen time is not a factor. Still wear my SEIKO dive watch after 33 years too. And still have a SCUBA-PRO AIR-TWO double regulator for any 'buddy breathing' panic situations. I'm a heavy breather, not a 'sipper' so I use the large Aluminum tank. Would screw up my diminished courage though, to use Heli-ox to dive the Jersy coast U-boat wreck. Dove my first 100' footer on the Hannah Hooper? off Bonaire, Dutch Antilles some decades ago; torpedoed by a U-boat. I do the CA Channel Island occasionally for night spiny lobster(red lamp with net bag) and fresh scallops-pure sushi on the aft-deck while still in my neoprene suit...Yum:arrgh!:August has got it though, pure O past 1 atmosphere (33') causes convulsions whereas normal air at 100' only nitrogen narcosis...:hmmm:
Jimbuna
01-19-14, 02:49 PM
Indeed. Backup in such an unforgiving environment is an absolute must.
I'm certainly no expert on diving but I totally agree and have never went diving (in my younger days) without backup.
Wolferz
01-19-14, 03:21 PM
It would be cool to use in the pool.:up: Down deep requires exotic mixtures.
Too rich for my wallet.
Tango589
01-19-14, 03:27 PM
Maybe this new fandangled mask is best suited to footling about in shallow waters?
Skybird
01-19-14, 04:40 PM
Funny. Because when I was at school I once wrote a mild scifi story about the future undersea life of mankind - and described a breathing device that essentially only was a mouthpiece with a small electric pump that filters oxygen out of the water. Essentially the thing that they realised now, I even had a look on mind that was not too different from what I see here. :) The teacher was not convinced, saying that the idea that the breathing under water would not be restricted by oxygene reserves but the duration of a micro-battery was "absurd".
Hey, Mr. Teacher! We had button cells for clocks already back in the 80s! ;)
I will sue these guys for stealing my idea. :arrgh!:
Gargamel
01-19-14, 04:48 PM
Actually, A heli-Ox mix isnt out of the question, it'd just let you take more Helium with you.
Like AK said, I'm not a sipper either, so buddy-breathing at the bottom of a tank scares me. I've been so low on air before that my tank was less dense than the water, forcing me to hold on, upside down with a totally empty vest, to the anchor line on my deco stop.
And Yes, I too wear a dive watch, don't totally trust computers, and still manually log my hours.
Plan the Dive, Dive the Plan.
Gargamel
01-19-14, 04:50 PM
Funny. Because when I was at school I once wrote a mild scifi story about the future undersea life of mankind - and described a breathing device that essentially only was a mouthpiece with a small electric pump that filters oxygen out of the water. Essentially the thing that they realised now, I even had a look on mind that was not too different from what I see here. :) The teacher was not convinced, saying that the idea that the breathing under water would not be restricted by oxygene reserves but the duration of a micro-battery was "absurd".
Hey, Mr. Teacher! We had button cells for clocks already back in the 80s! ;)
I will sue these guys for stealing my idea. :arrgh!:
You may be able to negate their patent under prior art rules lol.
Gargamel
01-19-14, 04:51 PM
There is an upside to being an older "naturally insulated' diver...ya almost never get cold, but it takes thirty pounds of lead to neutralize all the buoyancy in a suit (32 degrees) at 100'! And annoying unobservant do-gooders do try ta roll ya back in while your recovering from lumbering up from the surf!:O:
Ahhhh! So true!
Jimbuna
01-19-14, 05:44 PM
Ahhhh! So true!
Sadly but playing to the audience :know:
Again though, oxygen is deadly at depth. Unless there is a way to add helium or other inert gas the use of this gizmo would be limited to 15' or less.
Gargamel
01-19-14, 10:14 PM
Again though, oxygen is deadly at depth. Unless there is a way to add helium or other inert gas the use of this gizmo would be limited to 15' or less.
It's almost useless, given your point, for recreational divers. Air is 22% O2, 75% N2, and 2% CO2, plus some other rubbish (I'm off with those numbers, i just forget the exact amount of N2). If you remove the O2, you're only saving 22% volume in compressing the air you'd have to mix. The expense of doing that for a rec diver is not worth it, when a tank of compressed air is almost free. Heli-ox though..... It'd save ya a whole tank IIRC.
The thing is you have to be able to take in an entire lungful of air in order to breath properly.
That becomes a problem at depth because gas has to be compressed to overcome water pressure. If I remember my SCUBA lessons right, every 33' down gas compresses by half it's volume. That means at say 100' feet every breath you take is the equivalent of 4 lungfuls of air and therefore 4 times the amount of oxygen molecules with each breath. Eventually if you go deep enough you can take in a toxic amount of oxygen just by breathing normally and that's using regular air.
Now if you're breathing in pure oxygen like this device creates then you don't have to go very deep before you get to that point that's why it has to be have some other gas mixed in with it.
Wolferz
01-21-14, 06:58 AM
In terms of a Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus...
Make mine a Balao.:up:
In terms of a Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus...
Make mine a Balao.:up:
No way would I ever go diving with 60+ year old gear unless I had a death wish. :)
Wolferz
01-21-14, 10:36 AM
No way would I ever go diving with 60+ year old gear unless I had a death wish. :)
Well, refurbished of course.:haha:
Besides, the only diving I'll ever do is virtual and muff. I hate water and the oceans stink. No way will I voluntarily jump into the big fish toilet.:arrgh!:
Well, refurbished of course.:haha:
Besides, the only diving I'll ever do is virtual and muff. I hate water and the oceans stink. No way will I voluntarily jump into the big fish toilet.:arrgh!:
So a dip in the Ganges is out of the question then? :)
Jimbuna
01-21-14, 04:53 PM
So a dip in the Ganges is out of the question then? :)
LOL :)
Wolferz
01-21-14, 05:44 PM
So a dip in the Ganges is out of the question then? :)
You swim in the Ganges? :huh:
If so, how's the Herpes doing?:03:
Gargamel
01-21-14, 06:42 PM
Justification for ya Wolfy:
https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/1521887_743287265692287_780319678_n.jpg
http://bit.ly/1cZbsia
Wolferz
01-21-14, 10:28 PM
:huh: Just as I feared , Gargamel.
Where's Azriel? I'm hungry.:hmmm:
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