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- From: mayne@pipe.cs.fsu.edu (William Mayne)
- Subject: Re: Rebreathing system
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.151012.24326@mailer.cc.fsu.edu>
- Sender: news@mailer.cc.fsu.edu (Usenet News File Owner)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pipe.cs.fsu.edu
- Reply-To: mayne@cs.fsu.edu
- Organization: Florida State University Computer Science Department
- References: <YfNVz4600WB24JOydd@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 93 15:10:12 GMT
- Lines: 58
-
- In article <YfNVz4600WB24JOydd@andrew.cmu.edu> "Rudolph R. Zung" <ru+@CMU.EDU> writes:
- >
- >In a recent issue of Outside magazine, they did this article about a guy
- >who wanted to do some diving in the world's deepest cave system. His
- >problem was that all existing scuba technology did not allow him enough
- >downtime in the water. So, he scrounged up a few million dollars, did lots
- >of reading, designed and built a complete closed, rebreathing system...
-
- That would be Dr. Bill Stone (Ph.D. in engineering). I was at the test
- site last spring, acting as a safety diver for someone training in use
- of the rebreather, when the guy from Outside magazine showed up.
-
- >Because this was potentially BIG money yet to be patented, the article
- >writer had sign a confidentiality form indicating that he would not write
- >about the technical aspects of the system.
- >
- >My question: has there been any more information? Does anyone have any idea
- >how a system such as thus might work?
-
- Everyone allowed on the site had to sign that agreement. But some details
- have been published, presumably with the approval of Dr. Stone and
- his company, which is called Cislunar. Chapter 20 of "Mixed Gas Diving"
- (Watersport Books, 1992 and 1993) by Gilliam and Mount goes into this
- and some other rebreathers, but concentrating mostly on the Cislunar
- MK-2. The chapter is written by Richard Nordstrom. Photographs and
- diagrams are included. If you just want to know about this, and not
- try to build one (which would be foolish for the average Ph.D. engineer
- off the street to attempt :-)) this chapter would tell you most of what
- you would want to know. My impression is that the MK-2 rebreather is not
- as close to being marketed as the article says. Otherwise it is accurate.
- Hopefully I am wrong and they will hit the market this year.
-
- There was also a much less detailed article on it by Wes Skiles in
- Rodale's Scuba Diving magazine several months ago. It concentrated
- mostly on describing the experience of using a rebreather in a cave.
-
- Rebreathers are of great interest to the mixed gas diving community.
- Because the price of helium is so high and so much gear is needed
- anyway rebreathers, even at several thousand dollars apiece, become
- cost effective. I may have to take out a second mortgage on my house
- to buy one someday.
-
- >This guy does have a several working models; it's probably well beyond beta
- >testing. The pictures of it look pretty high-techy. The inventor said that
- >the whole thing has redundant designs in it for safety and is driven by
- >several computers. From what I remember, the system takes a diver's
- >exhalation, remove the CO2, and recycles the rest back into the system
- >again. I think he calculated his system to be able to support dives
- >measured in the teens of hours (13, or 16).
-
- That is basically it. The onboard electronics control adding oxygen
- to make up the oxygen used by the diver and maintain a safe partial
- pressure. It also has a small bottle of helium (or other diluent gas
- - air can be used for shallow dives) to make up changes in volume
- due to depth. Decompression is also computed by the controlling
- computer.
-
- Bill Mayne
-