[PSUBS-MAILIST] onboard gear

MerlinSub@t-online.de via Personal_Submersibles personal_submersibles at psubs.org
Sun Apr 28 09:56:46 EDT 2019


Rick we never discuss the co2 type. We discuss the BCD with the air pony 
bottle.
 
 
 
 
-----Original-Nachricht-----
Betreff: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] onboard gear
Datum: 2019-04-28T01:00:42+0200
Von: "Rick Patton via Personal_Submersibles" 
<personal_submersibles at psubs.org>
An: "Personal Submersibles General Discussion" 
<personal_submersibles at psubs.org>
 
 
 
I used to have a BC back around 1968 that was called a Buoy Fenzy and it 
had it's own pony bottle attached to it for inflation and you could re fill 
the bottle by attaching it to a scuba tank to equalize or have shop fill 
it.
 It had a lot more volume than the CO2 inflation type and had a hose with a 
mouth piece and button to push to breath out of it if you had to.
 I haven't seen them for ages so must not be made anymore but this would be 
great to have on board for escape as it would give you a lot more air at 
depth than the CO2 type and you could breath off of it without loosing any 
air like a closed circuit system and a bit more air to breath as it 
expanded on ascent. 
Rick

On Sat, Apr 27, 2019 at 4:11 AM MerlinSub at t-online.de
<mailto:MerlinSub at t-online.de> via Personal_Submersibles <
personal_submersibles at psubs.org <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > 
wrote:
  Why you want to breath the first minute of your fly?
  Just ensure that the gas can get out of our lungs to not overpressure it.
  And by the way - if you not breath you can not get additional gas which
  can expant into your blood.
  And how long you can stop breathing has more to do with your brain - than
  with your lungs.
  I am now 54 and can stop not more than 1 minute. In my best time and with
  training it was easy over 2. 
   
  But this is pure theoretical. The best equipment to surfive a submarine
  exit is - training.
   
  The lung can overexpant easy  but this will happend more or less on the
  last 10 meters to the surface.
  If you have the training and expierence to slow down your speed there it
  will help a lot.
   
   
   
   
  -----Original-Nachricht-----
  Betreff: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] onboard gear
  Datum: 2019-04-27T05:24:20+0200
  Von: "Alan via Personal_Submersibles" <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
  <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
  An: "Personal Submersibles General Discussion" <
  personal_submersibles at psubs.org <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
  >
   
   
   
   
  Thanks Tom, a lot to think about.
  Yes breathing from the BCD could be problematic on a deep ascent as the
  gas would be expanding very little over the first few hundred feet & as
  you
  say you could easily consume it & reduce your flotation.
  Alan

  On 27/04/2019, at 2:24 PM, TOM WHENT via Personal_Submersibles <
  personal_submersibles at psubs.org <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
  > wrote:


      That is a whole lot of task loading for an emergency. Chances are
      little of this will be reflexive from repeated practice. Having a
      good non narcotic gas to breathe during flood/exit procedures would
      be beneficial in keeping your head. Keep in mind that helium on
      boards  2.7 times faster than nitrogen and also comes out of your
      tissues that much faster. Too much time breathing on it might cause
      you to be severely bent before reaching the surface on a fast ascent.
      Most helium bends occur under water and it will even off gas through
      your eyes. I've never experienced this but I have heard that it is
      painful.

      Breathing from a BCD seems like a bad idea to me. It would be
      marginally passable as long as you are certain that you are
      ascending. Accidentally wasting or venting your buoyancy gas would be
      disastrous. Many trained divers struggle with buoyancy control and
      can't manipulate inflators with cold hands or in panic.

      Coming up fast from any depth, you will need to ensure that you are
      exhaling continually, or able to breath in and out so that your
      airway is never closed. You have no pain mechanism in your body to
      alert you to a lung overpressure. If you rupture a lung you have no
      chance of survival even if you do reach the surface.

      I had thought about the idea of wearing a neoprene wetsuit inside the
      sub as an alternate means of buoyancy and environmental protection
      but after considering the depths you guys are escaping from, that too
      would have minimal buoyancy due to the crush on the suit from the
      pressure. It would however provide some warmth, even if marginally.

      Whatever solution you choose,  it will have to be simple enough to
      deploy under the worst conditions imaginable and preferably protect
      your airway on the surface if you should lose consciousness.

      I'm generally not an advocate of full face masks for scuba diving,
      but in this circumstance, if you had one and a means of flotation,
      you would stand a better chance of survival than using a regulator
      (or BCD inflator) which will fall out of your mouth if you lose
      consciousness. You generally cannot use the firefighter style face
      mask, but must use one designed for diving. The reason being that the
      latter will have a flexible nose pocket to allow you to pinch it for
      equalizing.
      The hood and escape suits look better all the time.


      Tom

      Get Outlook for Android <https://aka.ms/ghei36>



      On Fri, Apr 26, 2019 at 8:14 PM -0400, "Alan via
      Personal_Submersibles" <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
      <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:

         
        Carsten,
        yes you could rely on air out of your BCD but it is not regarded as
        a good
        practice because of disinfectants used to clean out BCDs. You would
        need
        to find a suitable sterilising product. But this is an emergency!
        I think maybe, as I have said, an escape plan for every 100 ft
        based on the
        volume of your sub, how quickly you can flood it, how quickly you
        can equalise
        your ears & what mixed gas you need to avoid getting narced, bent &
        O2
        Poisoning. Beyond certain depths you would need to start breathing
        mixed 
        gas from a pony bottle or whatever as the hull equalised.
        Now you have me thinking!!! What about an external scuba tank full
        of mixed
        gas plumbed through to the cabin to breath from during the flooding
        of the hull,
        this would give you a lot more time to equalise your ears! Plumb
        this tank to
        act as a reserve ballast blow so it is not wasted. Leave the sub
        with the pony
        bottle full of mixed gas & inflate the horseshoe BCD with it, then
        breath from
        the BCD.
        Alan
         
         

        On 27/04/2019, at 9:45 AM, MerlinSub at t-online.de
        <mailto:MerlinSub at t-online.de> via Personal_Submersibles <
        personal_submersibles at psubs.org
        <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


            Alan the pony is just for the first filling the vest in the
            moment you leave the sub.
            During the fast as possible way to the surface the air in the
            vest expand all the
            time and leave via the overpressure valve. 
             
            Imagine you have a vest of say 4 Liter. How much air will be in
            if you leave the sub in 100 meter deeps?
            Right - around 40 liters. During your way to the surface 36
            liters will leave via the overpressure vale.
            Pretty much air to breath. The pony bottle is just there for
            the first filling- so you have not to fill tthe
            vest wih your lungs because this is exhaust gas and the process
            may exhaust you also.
             
            A filled 220 bar by  0,5 Liter pony bottle contains 110 liter
            expand gas.
            If we assume the vest has 4 Liters volume you can fill the vest
            up to a depth equal to 27 bar or 270 meter dephts.
            And you can breath all these 110Liter air from the vest except
            the last 4 liters which you need on the surface
            for bouancy.
             
            In real life it is may better first to leave the sub and than
            open the valve to fill the vest.
            Otherwise it makes you more bulky and you have the possibility
            to scratch the vest somewere on your sub exit.
             
            If you have no expiernce with such vest you should traning it
            in a 2-4 meter depth pool to get an feeling for it.
             
            On Euronaut we have all that gear on board. Scuba vest, Steinke
            hoods and dive gear including suits.
             
            On a emergency exit of a sunen military argentinna submarnne
            which was sunken in the 80ies or 90ies some crew members manage
            to escape from 40 meter depth. The guys with the Steinke Hoods
            and no dive expierence survifed all.
            The colleges with the scuba expierence use the dive gears -
            help the other guys to get out -
            and died later on decompression thickness. :-(
             
             
             
             
            -----Original-Nachricht-----
            Betreff: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] onboard gear
            Datum: 2019-04-26T23:03:14+0200
            Von: "Alan via Personal_Submersibles" <
            personal_submersibles at psubs.org
            <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
            An: "Personal Submersibles General Discussion" <
            personal_submersibles at psubs.org
            <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
             
             
             
             
            Sean / all,
            the cold will certainly be a factor but you will be exposed to
            that for some
            time while the submarine fills with water & equalises. So the
            extra 15 seconds
            grabbing an external tank won't be major.
            What I fear most is bursting my ear drums, & freezing water in
            the inner ear.
            I imagine this would be very painful, maybe like brain freeze,
            but I am only guessing.
            Some people have more problems than others equalising & once
            you start to
            feel pain in your ear from pressure it is more difficult to
            equalise.
            I think some control on the flooding speed to let you equalise
            your ears would
            be an asset. Pitty to burst your ear drums when you might be
            doing a simple
            escape from 100ft.
            As Emile & Carsten showed with their practice escapes; they
            could get out
            relatively easily, & with a bit of air ( 6 cu ft pony bottle )
            you could get to the
            surface easy enough.
            If I were escaping from deeper I would use a pony bottle with
            mixed gas some
            time after the equivalent of 150ft & this would buy me a bit of
            time to equalise
            & save my ears, then escape & use my large mixed gas tank to go
            to the surface
            making stops if I felt able.
            There is sense in you saying Keep It Simple, but if you pre
            plan & practice, a
            more complex but safer escape is possible. Maybe work out how
            long it is going 
            to take to fill your particular sub at varying depths, how
            quickly you could equalise
            for varying depths. How long your pony bottle would last you &
            have a knowledge 
            of what stops would be best for the varying depths you may
            escape from.
            At least that would take away a lot of the fear of the unknown
            & reduce panic.
            BTW I am a diver & amateur speleologist so used to cold wet
            tight spaces.
            Alan
             
             
             
             

            On 27/04/2019, at 12:17 AM, Sean T. Stevenson via
            Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
            <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


                Alan - Don't overthink this. A buoyant emergency ascent can
                get you to the surface in less than 60 seconds if you are
                not purposefully attempting to limit your ascent rate. How
                long can you hold your breath (not that you should)? A gas
                source helps you avoid a hypoxic blackout, but with a hood
                of any description you shouldn't drown. You'll just end up
                rebreathing some of the hood gas. As we discussed earlier,
                hypothermia will be an issue, as will the exposure time -
                it is actually better to get up from depth ASAP than to
                spend time messing around at depth and then having a bunch
                of stuff slowing your ascent while deep. My point about the
                gas consumption was to illustrate how impractical it would
                be to carry sufficient gas to enable an ascent as a diver
                would do it.

                Sean


                -------- Original Message --------
                On Apr 25, 2019, 23:39, Alan via Personal_Submersibles < 
                personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


                     
                    More thoughts on escape...
                    Went in to a couple of dive shops today looking at pony
                    bottles.
                    The smallest they were selling were 19 cu ft. I did see
                    a 13 cu ft they were 
                    filling. Both looked too big for my intended dual
                    purpose use of a horse shoe
                    BCD as a life jacked. A bit clutsy getting in to the
                    sub wearing a BCD & large
                    tank. They make a 6 cu ft pony bottle but I would have
                    to import it & it would
                    only get me to the surface from about 100ft.
                    I had the thought of filling a 6 cu ft pony bottle with
                    mixed gas & having an 
                    80 cuft mixed gas tank outside the hull. It could have
                    an octopus regulator
                    ( to avoid free flow) permanently on the 80 & a quick
                    disconnect fitting on it that
                    a hose attaches to for use as a reserve ballast blow. 
                    So you breath through your pony reg while flooding &
                    escaping, then when
                    outside use the 80 cu ft tank reg while detaching the
                    ballast hose, attaching
                    the BCD connection and un latching the tank.
                    It could be practiced in the garage with your eyes
                    closed & done in about 15
                    seconds. Any thoughts on this?
                    Alan
                     

                    On 26/04/2019, at 1:38 PM, Alan via
                    Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                    <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


                         
                        Thanks Carsten,
                        I am thinking I may go with something similar; a
                        horse collar BCD with a
                        13 cu ft pony bottle. (BCD below).
                        It could double as a life jacket, has manual
                        inflation &  push button inflation.
                        I would have a regulator off the pony bottle as
                        well.
                        The BCD has an over inflation valve but if you
                        wanted your air to last in an emergency
                        you could breath expanding air out of the BCD
                        through the manual inflation
                        mouth piece. With a BCD as apposed to a life jacket
                        you have the chance to
                        slow your ascent & do a decompression stop.
                        I am not sure what the maximum depth is that I
                        could come up from with a 13 cu ft 
                        tank.
                        I could use this for shallow dives or as a
                        supplement for snorkelling, so it won't be
                        sitting in a sub doing nothing.
                        Alan
                         
                        <image1.PNG>
                         
                         

                        On 25/04/2019, at 7:42 PM, MerlinSub at t-online.de
                        <mailto:MerlinSub at t-online.de> via
                        Personal_Submersibles <
                        personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                        <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


                            We figure out that the best escape equipment
                            will be a Steinke hood (hard to get now)
                            or a traditional scuba west with a small on
                            board air bottle.
                            Both give you the high lift capacity you need
                            to make an fast rise.
                            For bigger subs and cold waters light diving
                            suits will help muxh.
                             
                            Second it will  help you a lot if you allready
                            a diver or had make a course.
                             
                            We make some years ago some exercieces with a
                            semi finish Psub scuttled in a pool . 
                            First go out were really bad feelings and
                            schock about the water rush in and the cold and
                            so.Have these in mind: panic.
                            But after 3-4 times and with the knowledge it
                            was fun to do the escape exercice.
                             
                            With training and the right gear I see no
                            problem to get out of a sub even from much
                            greater dephts.
                             
                            The releasing signal bouy should have a stopper
                            on the reel.  Otherwise a 300 m rope bouy will
                            drived far away with a sub sunken in 30 m .
                            And make the life of the rescue diver much
                            harder. The rope shall resitance the force a
                            human can pull on it - say 150 Kg at least.
                            Somebody on the surface can come to the
                            conclusion to lift the baot on these rope-
                            better make a mark on the Bouy "Sunken
                            submarine - dont pull on the rope!"
                             
                            vbr Carsten
                             
                             
                             
                             
                            -----Original-Nachricht-----
                            Betreff: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] onboard gear
                            Datum: 2019-04-25T00:07:11+0200
                            Von: "Alan via Personal_Submersibles" <
                            personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                            <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                            An: "Personal Submersibles General Discussion"
                            <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                            <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                             
                             
                             
                             
                            Perhaps a Psub plan for escape from down to
                            100ft, as you could do this 
                            100 times out of 100 if you knew what you were
                            doing.
                            Also even though most subs are capable of
                            diving deeper there is more
                            probability that entanglements like ropes &
                            nets are going to be encountered
                            In shallower depths. 
                            BTW the pressure in the sub is going to
                            increase incrementally quicker as it
                            floods & you need to keep equalising your ears
                            like mad toward the end or
                            you'll burst your ear drums, & aside from that
                            pain, will have freezing water 
                            going in to your inner ear. That would increase
                            your chances of failure.
                            Alan

                            On 24/04/2019, at 4:12 PM, Stephen Fordyce via
                            Personal_Submersibles <
                            personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                            <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                            wrote:


                                Hi all,
                                This is an interesting discussion I've been
                                meaning to weigh in on - as an experienced
                                tech/deep/cave diver rather than a sub
                                person.
                                 
                                My feel is that unless the escapee is an
                                experienced diver (and even then), the
                                chances of a successful escape from below
                                50m/150ft depth are so low as to be almost
                                negligible. And I'd suggest having a plan
                                for such is (almost) an entirely false
                                sense of security - and energy should be
                                diverted elsewhere to reduce risk.
                                 
                                A few of the scarier things like narcosis
                                and the bends have had a lot of airtime,
                                but basic stuff like keeping a diving mask
                                clear (and one that's probably fogging up),
                                panic-breathing a soggy SCUBA reg and
                                dealing with the thermal shock of sudden
                                immersion are likely to cause death by
                                drowning much earlier. Don't underestimate
                                the thermal shock and how useless it makes
                                you with no exposure suit. Breathing a
                                regulator without a mask is a skill in
                                itself. You're probably already suffering
                                from fatigue, stress, high CO2 and/or low
                                O2 from waiting for rescue and getting to
                                such a desperate point. All of these cause
                                significant mental impairment before you
                                even start on the escape.
                                 
                                Forget about planning to hold stops on the
                                way up, switch gases or do decompression.
                                Even if you're lucky enough to still be
                                conscious and thinking in the latter stages
                                of the rapid ascent, personal buoyancy
                                control is unlikely to be possible.
                                 
                                So if you're going to attempt to escape, I
                                suggest the best chance for survival is to
                                plan on a very simple setup (per person),
                                buoyancy for a rapid/undignified ascent,
                                and needing urgent medical attention and
                                oxygen on the surface.  Maybe carry a
                                cylinder of trimix on board to give
                                yourself a better chance of being able to
                                think, but it's a big weight/cost premium
                                if it's enough to be useful.  Use a divers
                                (with closed bottom) "lift bag" and a loop
                                around at the armpits as a quick and easy
                                way to get a person shooting upwards. CO2
                                inflatable life jacket to keep unconscious
                                head above water on surface. (Inflate at
                                depth while conscious - won't fill much,
                                but will expand on way up) Might be better
                                put towards things like extra life support
                                duration.  Consider doing regular practise
                                drills that are as realistic as possible.
                                 
                                Highly skilled divers mess up basic skills
                                in stressful situations and die with sad
                                regularity. Don't imagine your (and
                                passengers) chances of winging it at depth
                                will be anything other than tiny. 30m/90ft
                                and shallower they are a bit better.
                                 
                                I hate to be negative, but perhaps for deep
                                PSUB diving, the inability to escape is
                                just one of those residual risks that can
                                be accepted for a recreational activity.
                                 
                                Cheers,
                                Steve Fordyce 
                                Melbourne, Australia

                                On Wed, 24 Apr 2019 10:57 hank pronk via
                                Personal_Submersibles <
                                personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                                wrote:
                                   
                                  I think all submarines should have an
                                  escape pod or jettisoning occupant
                                  sphere.  I admit I made a mistake with my
                                  escape pod by making it only for one.  An
                                  easy fix that I will likely tackle, and
                                  that is to stretch the pod making it big
                                  enough for two.  E3000 has a jettisoning
                                  occupant sphere.
                                  Hank
                                   
                                  On Tuesday, April 23, 2019, 5:39:01 PM
                                  MDT, TOM WHENT via Personal_Submersibles
                                  <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                  <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
                                  > wrote:
                                   
                                   
                                  A compact bail out rebreather might be
                                  the most surviveable solution however it
                                  would require a significant commitment in
                                  training, maintenance as well as the cost
                                  of the equipment itself. I personally
                                  have not been following the development
                                  of bailout rebreathers, although i'm
                                  aware that some are working on this. My
                                  dive group relies on planning for open
                                  circuit bailout in the event of
                                  rebreather failure.

                                  If money is no object, I am partial to
                                  the ISC Megalodon classic CCR. In terms
                                  of robustness and deep water capability, 
                                  you will find none better.
                                  It will get you home and flies itself. It
                                  is an electronic CCR which maintains PPO2
                                  for the user. This is the unit I dive
                                  myself and feel very confident in.

                                  KISS classics, which are a simple and
                                  reliable mechanical CCR apparatus, often
                                  come up on the used market in affordable
                                  price ranges.

                                  Both would require significant equipment
                                  specific training but would get you out
                                  of a 400 ft jam with only two small
                                  cylinders and gas to spare. CCR duration
                                  is driven by metabolic rate and is the
                                  same irrespective of operational depth.
                                  Even the lowest end units will give you
                                  an hour plus.

                                  On ascent, rebreathers do require the
                                  diver to be monitoring the oxygen level
                                  display in the breathing loop and very
                                  likely adding oxygen manually -
                                  particularly in the mCCR type on a fast
                                  ascent.
                                  The other benefit of this setup is that
                                  an air cell for buoyancy can be
                                  integrated easily in one compact package.

                                  It sounds like a lot of effort for the
                                  non diver, but it is a functional answer
                                  to the risks of a sub disabled in deep
                                  water.
                                  What is a life worth?
                                  How much risk can one accept for a hobby?

                                  Food for thought anyhow.

                                  Get Outlook for Android
                                  <https://aka.ms/ghei36>



                                  On Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 7:34 PM -0400,
                                  "Alan via Personal_Submersibles" <
                                  personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                  <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
                                  > wrote:

                                     
                                   
                                  As an alternative to possible death or
                                  even worse, the loss of your submarine,
                                  I am in early stages of designing a buoy
                                  release mechanism that is used
                                  for surfacing safely but has an emergency
                                  beacon that can be activated 
                                  with an electro magnet.
                                  Thoughts are to use 150 lb braid with a
                                  tensioning mechanism & have an
                                  automatic boat latch mechanism that can
                                  slide down the braid but is fixed
                                  to the buoy with instructions, "tie a
                                  long rope to the ring & let down untill
                                  latch attaches to submarine. Pull up"
                                  The automatic latch is a device that Phil
                                  described & provided a drawing for,
                                  but there may be a cheap & suitable
                                  automatic boat latch ( used on release
                                  & retrieve on boat launching) on the
                                  market. I am still searching & if anyone
                                  knows of one that may be suitable I would
                                  be interested.
                                  Alan

                                  On 24/04/2019, at 10:51 AM, Sean T.
                                  Stevenson via Personal_Submersibles <
                                  personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                  <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
                                  > wrote:


                                      There is a significant difference
                                      between submarine escape and a
                                      planned SCUBA dive with regard to
                                      both the dive profile and the
                                      equipment that you can reasonably
                                      carry.  An escape is more akin to
                                      what is known as a buoyant emergency
                                      ascent in recreational diving, where
                                      you need to get to the surface
                                      yesterday and all other
                                      considerations are secondary.  In
                                      this specific case, trying to keep to
                                      a slow ascent rate would
                                      significantly increase the incurred
                                      decompression obligation that you
                                      must necessarily then blow off as you
                                      ascend through the shallows,
                                      introducing an even greater risk. 
                                      You also have the hypothermia issue
                                      to deal with if you are not equipped
                                      with exposure protection specifically
                                      intended for submersion at depth.
                                      Being cold reduces decompression
                                      effectiveness. In order to keep to a
                                      target ascent rate or perform
                                      decompression stops, you would need
                                      diving instrumentation (depth gauge
                                      and timer), would need the skills and
                                      experience to perform gas switches
                                      and hold stops, and would need
                                      significantly more bulky equipment to
                                      have enough gas to perform a proper
                                      decompression (slow ascent, gas
                                      switches, etc.).
                                       
                                      When I dive to these depths on SCUBA,
                                      I wear twin cylinders (>100 cu. ft.
                                      each) on my back with the bottom gas
                                      (10/70 or whatever for the planned
                                      depth and time), plus three or four
                                      off-board cylinders (80s) carrying
                                      the decompression gases (typically
                                      21/35, 35/25, EAN50 and oxygen), plus
                                      a small bottle of argon for drysuit
                                      inflation.  Obviously, as an escapee
                                      you are not so equipped.  Far better
                                      to lockout as quickly as possible and
                                      rapidly ascend (with buoyant assist)
                                      to get clear of those depths where
                                      you are ongassing the most, and if at
                                      all possible, to slow the ascent as
                                      you approach the surface, and then
                                      have your surface support or
                                      emergency responders administer
                                      oxygen as transport is arranged to
                                      recompression.  To be clear, an
                                      emergency escape from a disabled
                                      submarine at these depths is not even
                                      remotely a good idea - it is simply a
                                      marginally better idea than dying on
                                      the bottom.
                                       
                                       
                                       
                                      To illustrate, if you were to attempt
                                      a continuous ascent from 300 fsw, the
                                      average depth is 150 fsw, which is
                                      about 5.5 atmospheres absolute.  If
                                      you assume a surface air consumption
                                      rate of 1 cu. ft. / minute (high, but
                                      typical of a diver who is stressed or
                                      working hard, which is inevitable in
                                      a submarine escape scenario), that
                                      corresponds to 5.5 cu. ft. / min at
                                      the average depth of the ascent.  At
                                      a 30 ft/min ascent rate, that's 10
                                      minutes, or 55 cu. ft. of gas
                                      consumed just for the continuous
                                      ascent with no decompression stops,
                                      without consideration for the gas
                                      consumed while blowing down and
                                      locking out.  You can judge for
                                      yourself the practicality of carrying
                                      an 80 on a PSub sized vessel just for
                                      emergency escape purposes.
                                       
                                      Sean
                                       
                                      ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
                                      On Tuesday, April 23, 2019 12:32 PM,
                                      David Colombo via
                                      Personal_Submersibles <
                                      personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                      <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
                                      > wrote:
                                       

                                          Hi Guys, This topic is
                                          fascinating and scary at the same
                                          time. Accent rates form the old
                                          Navy logs had 60ft / minute max
                                          with a recommended max accent
                                          rate of 30 ft/ min. At 300ft
                                          escape depth, what volume of
                                          mixed gases would you need for a
                                          10 minute accent assuming you
                                          choose not to swim 60ft/min.
                                           
                                          Best Regards,
                                          David Colombo
                                          804 College Ave
                                          Santa Rosa, CA. 95404
                                          (707) 536-1424
                                          www.SeaQuestor.com
                                          <http://www.SeaQuestor.com>

                                       

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                                  As an alternative to possible death or
                                  even worse, the loss of your submarine,
                                  I am in early stages of designing a buoy
                                  release mechanism that is used
                                  for surfacing safely but has an emergency
                                  beacon that can be activated 
                                  with an electro magnet.
                                  Thoughts are to use 150 lb braid with a
                                  tensioning mechanism & have an
                                  automatic boat latch mechanism that can
                                  slide down the braid but is fixed
                                  to the buoy with instructions, "tie a
                                  long rope to the ring & let down untill
                                  latch attaches to submarine. Pull up"
                                  The automatic latch is a device that Phil
                                  described & provided a drawing for,
                                  but there may be a cheap & suitable
                                  automatic boat latch ( used on release
                                  & retrieve on boat launching) on the
                                  market. I am still searching & if anyone
                                  knows of one that may be suitable I would
                                  be interested.
                                  Alan

                                  On 24/04/2019, at 10:51 AM, Sean T.
                                  Stevenson via Personal_Submersibles <
                                  personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                  <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
                                  > wrote:


                                      There is a significant difference
                                      between submarine escape and a
                                      planned SCUBA dive with regard to
                                      both the dive profile and the
                                      equipment that you can reasonably
                                      carry.  An escape is more akin to
                                      what is known as a buoyant emergency
                                      ascent in recreational diving, where
                                      you need to get to the surface
                                      yesterday and all other
                                      considerations are secondary.  In
                                      this specific case, trying to keep to
                                      a slow ascent rate would
                                      significantly increase the incurred
                                      decompression obligation that you
                                      must necessarily then blow off as you
                                      ascend through the shallows,
                                      introducing an even greater risk. 
                                      You also have the hypothermia issue
                                      to deal with if you are not equipped
                                      with exposure protection specifically
                                      intended for submersion at depth.
                                      Being cold reduces decompression
                                      effectiveness. In order to keep to a
                                      target ascent rate or perform
                                      decompression stops, you would need
                                      diving instrumentation (depth gauge
                                      and timer), would need the skills and
                                      experience to perform gas switches
                                      and hold stops, and would need
                                      significantly more bulky equipment to
                                      have enough gas to perform a proper
                                      decompression (slow ascent, gas
                                      switches, etc.).
                                       
                                      When I dive to these depths on SCUBA,
                                      I wear twin cylinders (>100 cu. ft.
                                      each) on my back with the bottom gas
                                      (10/70 or whatever for the planned
                                      depth and time), plus three or four
                                      off-board cylinders (80s) carrying
                                      the decompression gases (typically
                                      21/35, 35/25, EAN50 and oxygen), plus
                                      a small bottle of argon for drysuit
                                      inflation.  Obviously, as an escapee
                                      you are not so equipped.  Far better
                                      to lockout as quickly as possible and
                                      rapidly ascend (with buoyant assist)
                                      to get clear of those depths where
                                      you are ongassing the most, and if at
                                      all possible, to slow the ascent as
                                      you approach the surface, and then
                                      have your surface support or
                                      emergency responders administer
                                      oxygen as transport is arranged to
                                      recompression.  To be clear, an
                                      emergency escape from a disabled
                                      submarine at these depths is not even
                                      remotely a good idea - it is simply a
                                      marginally better idea than dying on
                                      the bottom.
                                       
                                       
                                       
                                      To illustrate, if you were to attempt
                                      a continuous ascent from 300 fsw, the
                                      average depth is 150 fsw, which is
                                      about 5.5 atmospheres absolute.  If
                                      you assume a surface air consumption
                                      rate of 1 cu. ft. / minute (high, but
                                      typical of a diver who is stressed or
                                      working hard, which is inevitable in
                                      a submarine escape scenario), that
                                      corresponds to 5.5 cu. ft. / min at
                                      the average depth of the ascent.  At
                                      a 30 ft/min ascent rate, that's 10
                                      minutes, or 55 cu. ft. of gas
                                      consumed just for the continuous
                                      ascent with no decompression stops,
                                      without consideration for the gas
                                      consumed while blowing down and
                                      locking out.  You can judge for
                                      yourself the practicality of carrying
                                      an 80 on a PSub sized vessel just for
                                      emergency escape purposes.
                                       
                                      Sean
                                       
                                      ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
                                      On Tuesday, April 23, 2019 12:32 PM,
                                      David Colombo via
                                      Personal_Submersibles <
                                      personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                      <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
                                      > wrote:
                                       

                                          Hi Guys, This topic is
                                          fascinating and scary at the same
                                          time. Accent rates form the old
                                          Navy logs had 60ft / minute max
                                          with a recommended max accent
                                          rate of 30 ft/ min. At 300ft
                                          escape depth, what volume of
                                          mixed gases would you need for a
                                          10 minute accent assuming you
                                          choose not to swim 60ft/min.
                                           
                                          Best Regards,
                                          David Colombo
                                          804 College Ave
                                          Santa Rosa, CA. 95404
                                          (707) 536-1424
                                          www.SeaQuestor.com
                                          <http://www.SeaQuestor.com>

                                       

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      Carsten,
      yes you could rely on air out of your BCD but it is not regarded as a
      good
      practice because of disinfectants used to clean out BCDs. You would
      need
      to find a suitable sterilising product. But this is an emergency!
      I think maybe, as I have said, an escape plan for every 100 ft based
      on the
      volume of your sub, how quickly you can flood it, how quickly you can
      equalise
      your ears & what mixed gas you need to avoid getting narced, bent &
      O2
      Poisoning. Beyond certain depths you would need to start breathing
      mixed 
      gas from a pony bottle or whatever as the hull equalised.
      Now you have me thinking!!! What about an external scuba tank full of
      mixed
      gas plumbed through to the cabin to breath from during the flooding
      of the hull,
      this would give you a lot more time to equalise your ears! Plumb this
      tank to
      act as a reserve ballast blow so it is not wasted. Leave the sub with
      the pony
      bottle full of mixed gas & inflate the horseshoe BCD with it, then
      breath from
      the BCD.
      Alan
       
       

      On 27/04/2019, at 9:45 AM, MerlinSub at t-online.de
      <mailto:MerlinSub at t-online.de> via Personal_Submersibles <
      personal_submersibles at psubs.org
      <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


          Alan the pony is just for the first filling the vest in the
          moment you leave the sub.
          During the fast as possible way to the surface the air in the
          vest expand all the
          time and leave via the overpressure valve. 
           
          Imagine you have a vest of say 4 Liter. How much air will be in
          if you leave the sub in 100 meter deeps?
          Right - around 40 liters. During your way to the surface 36
          liters will leave via the overpressure vale.
          Pretty much air to breath. The pony bottle is just there for the
          first filling- so you have not to fill tthe
          vest wih your lungs because this is exhaust gas and the process
          may exhaust you also.
           
          A filled 220 bar by  0,5 Liter pony bottle contains 110 liter
          expand gas.
          If we assume the vest has 4 Liters volume you can fill the vest
          up to a depth equal to 27 bar or 270 meter dephts.
          And you can breath all these 110Liter air from the vest except
          the last 4 liters which you need on the surface
          for bouancy.
           
          In real life it is may better first to leave the sub and than
          open the valve to fill the vest.
          Otherwise it makes you more bulky and you have the possibility to
          scratch the vest somewere on your sub exit.
           
          If you have no expiernce with such vest you should traning it in
          a 2-4 meter depth pool to get an feeling for it.
           
          On Euronaut we have all that gear on board. Scuba vest, Steinke
          hoods and dive gear including suits.
           
          On a emergency exit of a sunen military argentinna submarnne
          which was sunken in the 80ies or 90ies some crew members manage
          to escape from 40 meter depth. The guys with the Steinke Hoods
          and no dive expierence survifed all.
          The colleges with the scuba expierence use the dive gears - help
          the other guys to get out -
          and died later on decompression thickness. :-(
           
           
           
           
          -----Original-Nachricht-----
          Betreff: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] onboard gear
          Datum: 2019-04-26T23:03:14+0200
          Von: "Alan via Personal_Submersibles" <
          personal_submersibles at psubs.org
          <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
          An: "Personal Submersibles General Discussion" <
          personal_submersibles at psubs.org
          <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
           
           
           
           
          Sean / all,
          the cold will certainly be a factor but you will be exposed to
          that for some
          time while the submarine fills with water & equalises. So the
          extra 15 seconds
          grabbing an external tank won't be major.
          What I fear most is bursting my ear drums, & freezing water in
          the inner ear.
          I imagine this would be very painful, maybe like brain freeze,
          but I am only guessing.
          Some people have more problems than others equalising & once you
          start to
          feel pain in your ear from pressure it is more difficult to
          equalise.
          I think some control on the flooding speed to let you equalise
          your ears would
          be an asset. Pitty to burst your ear drums when you might be
          doing a simple
          escape from 100ft.
          As Emile & Carsten showed with their practice escapes; they could
          get out
          relatively easily, & with a bit of air ( 6 cu ft pony bottle )
          you could get to the
          surface easy enough.
          If I were escaping from deeper I would use a pony bottle with
          mixed gas some
          time after the equivalent of 150ft & this would buy me a bit of
          time to equalise
          & save my ears, then escape & use my large mixed gas tank to go
          to the surface
          making stops if I felt able.
          There is sense in you saying Keep It Simple, but if you pre plan
          & practice, a
          more complex but safer escape is possible. Maybe work out how
          long it is going 
          to take to fill your particular sub at varying depths, how
          quickly you could equalise
          for varying depths. How long your pony bottle would last you &
          have a knowledge 
          of what stops would be best for the varying depths you may escape
          from.
          At least that would take away a lot of the fear of the unknown &
          reduce panic.
          BTW I am a diver & amateur speleologist so used to cold wet tight
          spaces.
          Alan
           
           
           
           

          On 27/04/2019, at 12:17 AM, Sean T. Stevenson via
          Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
          <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


              Alan - Don't overthink this. A buoyant emergency ascent can
              get you to the surface in less than 60 seconds if you are not
              purposefully attempting to limit your ascent rate. How long
              can you hold your breath (not that you should)? A gas source
              helps you avoid a hypoxic blackout, but with a hood of any
              description you shouldn't drown. You'll just end up
              rebreathing some of the hood gas. As we discussed earlier,
              hypothermia will be an issue, as will the exposure time - it
              is actually better to get up from depth ASAP than to spend
              time messing around at depth and then having a bunch of stuff
              slowing your ascent while deep. My point about the gas
              consumption was to illustrate how impractical it would be to
              carry sufficient gas to enable an ascent as a diver would do
              it.

              Sean


              -------- Original Message --------
              On Apr 25, 2019, 23:39, Alan via Personal_Submersibles < 
              personal_submersibles at psubs.org
              <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


                   
                  More thoughts on escape...
                  Went in to a couple of dive shops today looking at pony
                  bottles.
                  The smallest they were selling were 19 cu ft. I did see a
                  13 cu ft they were 
                  filling. Both looked too big for my intended dual purpose
                  use of a horse shoe
                  BCD as a life jacked. A bit clutsy getting in to the sub
                  wearing a BCD & large
                  tank. They make a 6 cu ft pony bottle but I would have to
                  import it & it would
                  only get me to the surface from about 100ft.
                  I had the thought of filling a 6 cu ft pony bottle with
                  mixed gas & having an 
                  80 cuft mixed gas tank outside the hull. It could have an
                  octopus regulator
                  ( to avoid free flow) permanently on the 80 & a quick
                  disconnect fitting on it that
                  a hose attaches to for use as a reserve ballast blow. 
                  So you breath through your pony reg while flooding &
                  escaping, then when
                  outside use the 80 cu ft tank reg while detaching the
                  ballast hose, attaching
                  the BCD connection and un latching the tank.
                  It could be practiced in the garage with your eyes closed
                  & done in about 15
                  seconds. Any thoughts on this?
                  Alan
                   

                  On 26/04/2019, at 1:38 PM, Alan via Personal_Submersibles
                  <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                  <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


                       
                      Thanks Carsten,
                      I am thinking I may go with something similar; a
                      horse collar BCD with a
                      13 cu ft pony bottle. (BCD below).
                      It could double as a life jacket, has manual
                      inflation &  push button inflation.
                      I would have a regulator off the pony bottle as well.
                      The BCD has an over inflation valve but if you wanted
                      your air to last in an emergency
                      you could breath expanding air out of the BCD through
                      the manual inflation
                      mouth piece. With a BCD as apposed to a life jacket
                      you have the chance to
                      slow your ascent & do a decompression stop.
                      I am not sure what the maximum depth is that I could
                      come up from with a 13 cu ft 
                      tank.
                      I could use this for shallow dives or as a supplement
                      for snorkelling, so it won't be
                      sitting in a sub doing nothing.
                      Alan
                       
                      <image1.PNG>
                       
                       

                      On 25/04/2019, at 7:42 PM, MerlinSub at t-online.de
                      <mailto:MerlinSub at t-online.de> via
                      Personal_Submersibles <
                      personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                      <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


                          We figure out that the best escape equipment will
                          be a Steinke hood (hard to get now)
                          or a traditional scuba west with a small on board
                          air bottle.
                          Both give you the high lift capacity you need to
                          make an fast rise.
                          For bigger subs and cold waters light diving
                          suits will help muxh.
                           
                          Second it will  help you a lot if you allready a
                          diver or had make a course.
                           
                          We make some years ago some exercieces with a
                          semi finish Psub scuttled in a pool . 
                          First go out were really bad feelings and schock
                          about the water rush in and the cold and so.Have
                          these in mind: panic.
                          But after 3-4 times and with the knowledge it was
                          fun to do the escape exercice.
                           
                          With training and the right gear I see no problem
                          to get out of a sub even from much greater
                          dephts.
                           
                          The releasing signal bouy should have a stopper
                          on the reel.  Otherwise a 300 m rope bouy will
                          drived far away with a sub sunken in 30 m .
                          And make the life of the rescue diver much
                          harder. The rope shall resitance the force a
                          human can pull on it - say 150 Kg at least.
                          Somebody on the surface can come to the
                          conclusion to lift the baot on these rope- better
                          make a mark on the Bouy "Sunken submarine - dont
                          pull on the rope!"
                           
                          vbr Carsten
                           
                           
                           
                           
                          -----Original-Nachricht-----
                          Betreff: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] onboard gear
                          Datum: 2019-04-25T00:07:11+0200
                          Von: "Alan via Personal_Submersibles" <
                          personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                          <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                          An: "Personal Submersibles General Discussion" <
                          personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                          <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                           
                           
                           
                           
                          Perhaps a Psub plan for escape from down to
                          100ft, as you could do this 
                          100 times out of 100 if you knew what you were
                          doing.
                          Also even though most subs are capable of diving
                          deeper there is more
                          probability that entanglements like ropes & nets
                          are going to be encountered
                          In shallower depths. 
                          BTW the pressure in the sub is going to increase
                          incrementally quicker as it
                          floods & you need to keep equalising your ears
                          like mad toward the end or
                          you'll burst your ear drums, & aside from that
                          pain, will have freezing water 
                          going in to your inner ear. That would increase
                          your chances of failure.
                          Alan

                          On 24/04/2019, at 4:12 PM, Stephen Fordyce via
                          Personal_Submersibles <
                          personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                          <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > wrote:


                              Hi all,
                              This is an interesting discussion I've been
                              meaning to weigh in on - as an experienced
                              tech/deep/cave diver rather than a sub
                              person.
                               
                              My feel is that unless the escapee is an
                              experienced diver (and even then), the
                              chances of a successful escape from below
                              50m/150ft depth are so low as to be almost
                              negligible. And I'd suggest having a plan for
                              such is (almost) an entirely false sense of
                              security - and energy should be diverted
                              elsewhere to reduce risk.
                               
                              A few of the scarier things like narcosis and
                              the bends have had a lot of airtime, but
                              basic stuff like keeping a diving mask clear
                              (and one that's probably fogging up),
                              panic-breathing a soggy SCUBA reg and dealing
                              with the thermal shock of sudden immersion
                              are likely to cause death by drowning much
                              earlier. Don't underestimate the thermal
                              shock and how useless it makes you with no
                              exposure suit. Breathing a regulator without
                              a mask is a skill in itself. You're probably
                              already suffering from fatigue, stress, high
                              CO2 and/or low O2 from waiting for rescue and
                              getting to such a desperate point. All of
                              these cause significant mental impairment
                              before you even start on the escape.
                               
                              Forget about planning to hold stops on the
                              way up, switch gases or do decompression.
                              Even if you're lucky enough to still be
                              conscious and thinking in the latter stages
                              of the rapid ascent, personal buoyancy
                              control is unlikely to be possible.
                               
                              So if you're going to attempt to escape, I
                              suggest the best chance for survival is to
                              plan on a very simple setup (per person),
                              buoyancy for a rapid/undignified ascent, and
                              needing urgent medical attention and oxygen
                              on the surface.  Maybe carry a cylinder of
                              trimix on board to give yourself a better
                              chance of being able to think, but it's a big
                              weight/cost premium if it's enough to be
                              useful.  Use a divers (with closed bottom)
                              "lift bag" and a loop around at the armpits
                              as a quick and easy way to get a person
                              shooting upwards. CO2 inflatable life jacket
                              to keep unconscious head above water on
                              surface. (Inflate at depth while conscious -
                              won't fill much, but will expand on way up)
                              Might be better put towards things like extra
                              life support duration.  Consider doing
                              regular practise drills that are as realistic
                              as possible.
                               
                              Highly skilled divers mess up basic skills in
                              stressful situations and die with sad
                              regularity. Don't imagine your (and
                              passengers) chances of winging it at depth
                              will be anything other than tiny. 30m/90ft
                              and shallower they are a bit better.
                               
                              I hate to be negative, but perhaps for deep
                              PSUB diving, the inability to escape is just
                              one of those residual risks that can be
                              accepted for a recreational activity.
                               
                              Cheers,
                              Steve Fordyce 
                              Melbourne, Australia

                              On Wed, 24 Apr 2019 10:57 hank pronk via
                              Personal_Submersibles <
                              personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                              <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                              wrote:
                                 
                                I think all submarines should have an
                                escape pod or jettisoning occupant sphere. 
                                I admit I made a mistake with my escape pod
                                by making it only for one.  An easy fix
                                that I will likely tackle, and that is to
                                stretch the pod making it big enough for
                                two.  E3000 has a jettisoning occupant
                                sphere.
                                Hank
                                 
                                On Tuesday, April 23, 2019, 5:39:01 PM MDT,
                                TOM WHENT via Personal_Submersibles <
                                personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                                wrote:
                                 
                                 
                                A compact bail out rebreather might be the
                                most surviveable solution however it would
                                require a significant commitment in
                                training, maintenance as well as the cost
                                of the equipment itself. I personally have
                                not been following the development of
                                bailout rebreathers, although i'm aware
                                that some are working on this. My dive
                                group relies on planning for open circuit
                                bailout in the event of rebreather failure.

                                If money is no object, I am partial to the
                                ISC Megalodon classic CCR. In terms of
                                robustness and deep water capability,  you
                                will find none better.
                                It will get you home and flies itself. It
                                is an electronic CCR which maintains PPO2
                                for the user. This is the unit I dive
                                myself and feel very confident in.

                                KISS classics, which are a simple and
                                reliable mechanical CCR apparatus, often
                                come up on the used market in affordable
                                price ranges.

                                Both would require significant equipment
                                specific training but would get you out of
                                a 400 ft jam with only two small cylinders
                                and gas to spare. CCR duration is driven by
                                metabolic rate and is the same irrespective
                                of operational depth. Even the lowest end
                                units will give you an hour plus.

                                On ascent, rebreathers do require the diver
                                to be monitoring the oxygen level display
                                in the breathing loop and very likely
                                adding oxygen manually - particularly in
                                the mCCR type on a fast ascent.
                                The other benefit of this setup is that an
                                air cell for buoyancy can be integrated
                                easily in one compact package.

                                It sounds like a lot of effort for the non
                                diver, but it is a functional answer to the
                                risks of a sub disabled in deep water.
                                What is a life worth?
                                How much risk can one accept for a hobby?

                                Food for thought anyhow.

                                Get Outlook for Android
                                <https://aka.ms/ghei36>



                                On Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 7:34 PM -0400,
                                "Alan via Personal_Submersibles" <
                                personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> > 
                                wrote:

                                   
                                 
                                As an alternative to possible death or even
                                worse, the loss of your submarine,
                                I am in early stages of designing a buoy
                                release mechanism that is used
                                for surfacing safely but has an emergency
                                beacon that can be activated 
                                with an electro magnet.
                                Thoughts are to use 150 lb braid with a
                                tensioning mechanism & have an
                                automatic boat latch mechanism that can
                                slide down the braid but is fixed
                                to the buoy with instructions, "tie a long
                                rope to the ring & let down untill
                                latch attaches to submarine. Pull up"
                                The automatic latch is a device that Phil
                                described & provided a drawing for,
                                but there may be a cheap & suitable
                                automatic boat latch ( used on release
                                & retrieve on boat launching) on the
                                market. I am still searching & if anyone
                                knows of one that may be suitable I would
                                be interested.
                                Alan

                                On 24/04/2019, at 10:51 AM, Sean T.
                                Stevenson via Personal_Submersibles <
                                personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                                wrote:


                                    There is a significant difference
                                    between submarine escape and a planned
                                    SCUBA dive with regard to both the dive
                                    profile and the equipment that you can
                                    reasonably carry.  An escape is more
                                    akin to what is known as a buoyant
                                    emergency ascent in recreational
                                    diving, where you need to get to the
                                    surface yesterday and all other
                                    considerations are secondary.  In this
                                    specific case, trying to keep to a slow
                                    ascent rate would significantly
                                    increase the incurred decompression
                                    obligation that you must necessarily
                                    then blow off as you ascend through the
                                    shallows, introducing an even greater
                                    risk.  You also have the hypothermia
                                    issue to deal with if you are not
                                    equipped with exposure protection
                                    specifically intended for submersion at
                                    depth. Being cold reduces decompression
                                    effectiveness. In order to keep to a
                                    target ascent rate or perform
                                    decompression stops, you would need
                                    diving instrumentation (depth gauge and
                                    timer), would need the skills and
                                    experience to perform gas switches and
                                    hold stops, and would need
                                    significantly more bulky equipment to
                                    have enough gas to perform a proper
                                    decompression (slow ascent, gas
                                    switches, etc.).
                                     
                                    When I dive to these depths on SCUBA, I
                                    wear twin cylinders (>100 cu. ft. each)
                                    on my back with the bottom gas (10/70
                                    or whatever for the planned depth and
                                    time), plus three or four off-board
                                    cylinders (80s) carrying the
                                    decompression gases (typically 21/35,
                                    35/25, EAN50 and oxygen), plus a small
                                    bottle of argon for drysuit inflation. 
                                    Obviously, as an escapee you are not so
                                    equipped.  Far better to lockout as
                                    quickly as possible and rapidly ascend
                                    (with buoyant assist) to get clear of
                                    those depths where you are ongassing
                                    the most, and if at all possible, to
                                    slow the ascent as you approach the
                                    surface, and then have your surface
                                    support or emergency responders
                                    administer oxygen as transport is
                                    arranged to recompression.  To be
                                    clear, an emergency escape from a
                                    disabled submarine at these depths is
                                    not even remotely a good idea - it is
                                    simply a marginally better idea than
                                    dying on the bottom.
                                     
                                     
                                     
                                    To illustrate, if you were to attempt a
                                    continuous ascent from 300 fsw, the
                                    average depth is 150 fsw, which is
                                    about 5.5 atmospheres absolute.  If you
                                    assume a surface air consumption rate
                                    of 1 cu. ft. / minute (high, but
                                    typical of a diver who is stressed or
                                    working hard, which is inevitable in a
                                    submarine escape scenario), that
                                    corresponds to 5.5 cu. ft. / min at the
                                    average depth of the ascent.  At a 30
                                    ft/min ascent rate, that's 10 minutes,
                                    or 55 cu. ft. of gas consumed just for
                                    the continuous ascent with no
                                    decompression stops, without
                                    consideration for the gas consumed
                                    while blowing down and locking out. 
                                    You can judge for yourself the
                                    practicality of carrying an 80 on a
                                    PSub sized vessel just for emergency
                                    escape purposes.
                                     
                                    Sean
                                     
                                    ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
                                    On Tuesday, April 23, 2019 12:32 PM,
                                    David Colombo via Personal_Submersibles
                                    <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                    <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
                                    > wrote:
                                     

                                        Hi Guys, This topic is fascinating
                                        and scary at the same time. Accent
                                        rates form the old Navy logs had
                                        60ft / minute max with a
                                        recommended max accent rate of 30
                                        ft/ min. At 300ft escape depth,
                                        what volume of mixed gases would
                                        you need for a 10 minute accent
                                        assuming you choose not to swim
                                        60ft/min.
                                         
                                        Best Regards,
                                        David Colombo
                                        804 College Ave
                                        Santa Rosa, CA. 95404
                                        (707) 536-1424
                                        www.SeaQuestor.com
                                        <http://www.SeaQuestor.com>

                                     

                                    _______________________________________________
                                    Personal_Submersibles mailing list
                                    Personal_Submersibles at psubs.org
                                    <mailto:Personal_Submersibles at psubs.org>
                                    http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles
                                    <http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles>


                                 
                                 
                                As an alternative to possible death or even
                                worse, the loss of your submarine,
                                I am in early stages of designing a buoy
                                release mechanism that is used
                                for surfacing safely but has an emergency
                                beacon that can be activated 
                                with an electro magnet.
                                Thoughts are to use 150 lb braid with a
                                tensioning mechanism & have an
                                automatic boat latch mechanism that can
                                slide down the braid but is fixed
                                to the buoy with instructions, "tie a long
                                rope to the ring & let down untill
                                latch attaches to submarine. Pull up"
                                The automatic latch is a device that Phil
                                described & provided a drawing for,
                                but there may be a cheap & suitable
                                automatic boat latch ( used on release
                                & retrieve on boat launching) on the
                                market. I am still searching & if anyone
                                knows of one that may be suitable I would
                                be interested.
                                Alan

                                On 24/04/2019, at 10:51 AM, Sean T.
                                Stevenson via Personal_Submersibles <
                                personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> >
                                wrote:


                                    There is a significant difference
                                    between submarine escape and a planned
                                    SCUBA dive with regard to both the dive
                                    profile and the equipment that you can
                                    reasonably carry.  An escape is more
                                    akin to what is known as a buoyant
                                    emergency ascent in recreational
                                    diving, where you need to get to the
                                    surface yesterday and all other
                                    considerations are secondary.  In this
                                    specific case, trying to keep to a slow
                                    ascent rate would significantly
                                    increase the incurred decompression
                                    obligation that you must necessarily
                                    then blow off as you ascend through the
                                    shallows, introducing an even greater
                                    risk.  You also have the hypothermia
                                    issue to deal with if you are not
                                    equipped with exposure protection
                                    specifically intended for submersion at
                                    depth. Being cold reduces decompression
                                    effectiveness. In order to keep to a
                                    target ascent rate or perform
                                    decompression stops, you would need
                                    diving instrumentation (depth gauge and
                                    timer), would need the skills and
                                    experience to perform gas switches and
                                    hold stops, and would need
                                    significantly more bulky equipment to
                                    have enough gas to perform a proper
                                    decompression (slow ascent, gas
                                    switches, etc.).
                                     
                                    When I dive to these depths on SCUBA, I
                                    wear twin cylinders (>100 cu. ft. each)
                                    on my back with the bottom gas (10/70
                                    or whatever for the planned depth and
                                    time), plus three or four off-board
                                    cylinders (80s) carrying the
                                    decompression gases (typically 21/35,
                                    35/25, EAN50 and oxygen), plus a small
                                    bottle of argon for drysuit inflation. 
                                    Obviously, as an escapee you are not so
                                    equipped.  Far better to lockout as
                                    quickly as possible and rapidly ascend
                                    (with buoyant assist) to get clear of
                                    those depths where you are ongassing
                                    the most, and if at all possible, to
                                    slow the ascent as you approach the
                                    surface, and then have your surface
                                    support or emergency responders
                                    administer oxygen as transport is
                                    arranged to recompression.  To be
                                    clear, an emergency escape from a
                                    disabled submarine at these depths is
                                    not even remotely a good idea - it is
                                    simply a marginally better idea than
                                    dying on the bottom.
                                     
                                     
                                     
                                    To illustrate, if you were to attempt a
                                    continuous ascent from 300 fsw, the
                                    average depth is 150 fsw, which is
                                    about 5.5 atmospheres absolute.  If you
                                    assume a surface air consumption rate
                                    of 1 cu. ft. / minute (high, but
                                    typical of a diver who is stressed or
                                    working hard, which is inevitable in a
                                    submarine escape scenario), that
                                    corresponds to 5.5 cu. ft. / min at the
                                    average depth of the ascent.  At a 30
                                    ft/min ascent rate, that's 10 minutes,
                                    or 55 cu. ft. of gas consumed just for
                                    the continuous ascent with no
                                    decompression stops, without
                                    consideration for the gas consumed
                                    while blowing down and locking out. 
                                    You can judge for yourself the
                                    practicality of carrying an 80 on a
                                    PSub sized vessel just for emergency
                                    escape purposes.
                                     
                                    Sean
                                     
                                    ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
                                    On Tuesday, April 23, 2019 12:32 PM,
                                    David Colombo via Personal_Submersibles
                                    <personal_submersibles at psubs.org
                                    <mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org> 
                                    > wrote:
                                     

                                        Hi Guys, This topic is fascinating
                                        and scary at the same time. Accent
                                        rates form the old Navy logs had
                                        60ft / minute max with a
                                        recommended max accent rate of 30
                                        ft/ min. At 300ft escape depth,
                                        what volume of mixed gases would
                                        you need for a 10 minute accent
                                        assuming you choose not to swim
                                        60ft/min.
                                         
                                        Best Regards,
                                        David Colombo
                                        804 College Ave
                                        Santa Rosa, CA. 95404
                                        (707) 536-1424
                                        www.SeaQuestor.com
                                        <http://www.SeaQuestor.com>

                                     

                                    _______________________________________________
                                    Personal_Submersibles mailing list
                                    Personal_Submersibles at psubs.org
                                    <mailto:Personal_Submersibles at psubs.org>
                                    http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles
                                    <http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles>

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