Making Every Breath Count… Again and Again!

That is why gas extenders rule!

News that SDI/TDI instructors can now present KISS GEM programs to interested recreational sport divers opens up a whole world of possibilities for people who want the benefits of a rebreather without the full-on commitment of the classic closed-circuit training and regimen.

A quick survey of the hot topics on the scuba forums among divers will usually turn up at least one newly-minted open-water diver asking how to get his (or her) gas to last longer. “I can burn through aluminum 80 inside of 15 minutes and my (more experienced) buddy always surfaces with half a tank left!”

And we all know the usual advice: gain experience, work on aerobic fitness, streamline your gear, work on buoyancy and trim skills, etc., etc. But no matter how much experience one gains, or how efficiently your body uses oxygen, or how skillfully you glide through the water, there is a limit on how far you can get. The fascination with making your supply of compressed air last a little longer is never satisfied.

The major limitation of course is open-circuit technology. A diver only uses a small percentage of the oxygen in his compressed gas and when he exhales, the remainder is lost with his exhaust bubbles.

Rebreathers recirculate those exhaust bubbles, remove the carbon dioxide, and in some form or another — depending on the type of rebreather — top up with a squirt of new gas so the diver can continue seamlessly with his dive. The technology behind rebreathers is far from new but a few years ago, rebreathers of any type were the almost exclusive purview of military, scientific and technical divers. The sticker price, intensity of the training programs, and the upkeep and protocols required to dive a traditional rebreather purring along presented a turn-off for the majority of divers. Thus, rebreather divers represented a tiny percentage of the whole diving community.

This viewpoint has undergone a radical shift in the last couple of years. Specifically, rebreather companies have revisited the design and function of the traditional rebreather to make it more applicable and more appealing to a much broader market.

One approach is that adopted by KISS (Jetsam Industries) — well known for its innovative closed-circuit rebreathers.

Their KISS GEM is a recreational diving system, standing for Gas Extender Machine, which makes this a semi-closed diving system that allows divers to get around three times the usual dive time on a cubic foot of gas as they would on ordinary open-circuit.

The KISS GEM stands apart from other rebreathers, both semi closed and fully closed, because its design is compact, “bolts onto” a diver’s existing cylinder and is economical.

The GEM gives the benefit of rebreather diving with warm moist air to breath. This alone, in the opinion of many divers, is a huge benefit. SCR and CCR divers explain that at the end of their dive they are less fatigued and do not experience cotton mouth, even on the longest dive.

Photographers on rebreathers like the fact that there is no rush of noisy bubbles to scare the fish away.

All GEM divers will enjoy the benefits of diving enriched air nitrox (initial training on the unit is done with an EAN36 as breathing gas).

Because the GEM is an SCR gas extender, and the “scrubber” (where the carbon dioxide is removed from exhaled gas) uses a pre-made replaceable cartridge that is simply dropped into place rather than loose material that has to be packed very carefully by the diver, GEM operation is only slightly more complex than assembling and operating traditional open-circuit gear, and training programs are aimed at open-water divers with moderate experience.

However, as simple and straightforward as the GEM system is, its appeal is far wider than active sport divers and there are several technical divers — specifically cavers — who have resisted the switch to full closed circuit rebreathers but are using the GEM as a new and exciting way to “do their thing.”

With a growing number of TDI/SDI instructors offering programs on the KISS GEM, it is probably a safe bet to say that you will be seeing one at a dive site near you in the very near future, with a TDI diver attached!

To learn more about TDI training in your area, please visit https://www.sdi-onlinetraining.com/divers/index_facilities_courses.php?site=2 to find a facility by course.

To learn more about TDI courses available visit /index.php?did=51&site=2

TDI™ Releases Course Standards for GEM Level One Diver Course

Keeping with the latest in technology and the demands of new diving adventures and equipment, Technical Diving International (TDI) has released the course standards for the TDI Gem Level One diver course. TDI worked closely with KISS Rebreathers to get these completed. Kim Mikusch of KISS Rebreathers stated, “We are very pleased to have worked with the professionals at TDI in the developing of the KISS GEM training course.”

“For years there has been a void in the rebreather market for a semi-closed system,” stated Sean Harrison Vice President of Training and Membership Services. He went on to say, “I think the new GEM will meet the needs of divers looking for a way to extend their diving times and reduce the noise without going the fully closed circuit route.”

The TDI KISS GEM Level 1 Semi-Closed Circuit Rebreather (SCR) course is the ideal course for photographers, cold water divers or anybody wishing to enjoy a quieter dive and closer interaction with marine life. The course is unit and level specific covering the GEM Level 1 skills and academics. The GEM is an SCR that can be attached to any size cylinder within minutes and ready to go for a 2-4 hour dive (times water temperature dependent).

Many TDI™ Instructors and facilities have been eagerly awaiting this latest announcement from TDI™ Headquarters and are eager to get started with their programs.

To find a program near you please visit https://www.tdisdi.com or call 888.778.9073 or 207.729.4201

Avoid Surprises at Your Dive Site

The Ever Important Gear Checklist… Making it easy to get it right on game day

We have all been there. During the usual mayhem while getting geared up for a dive, you discover a critical piece of gear is missing. Over the years, I have seen everything from a missing drysuit to regulators left back in a hotel room, storage shed or car trunk. Some of the smaller “mishaps” – like a forgotten compass – can be overcome with loaner gear from shipmates and dive buddies, but on occasion, a forgotten piece of equipment can mean a wasted dive day. The situation is even worse when your diving takes you overnight or, better yet, overseas. There is nothing worse than standing at a dive site and realizing that something is not where you thought it would be… except, of course, being part-way through a dive when this thought occurs!

The answer to this very common conundrum is a checklist – a top to bottom “roll-call” for essential (and not so essential) dive gear that is suited to your style of diving and the dive trip you have planned.

At SDI we have been asked many times why we do not sell a pre-printed diver’s check-list-slate. The simple answer is that there is no really comprehensive generic list of gear that would make such a product worth the price while remaining relevant and applicable with our associate members around the world. Furthermore, the scope of an equipment checklist is directly proportional to the complexity of the dives being planned, how far the dive site is from the nearest dive shop, and how much room you have in your baggage allowance/vehicle! No single slate can accommodate the dynamism that makes diving so much fun and divers so individual.

But we can share with you what the staff at SDI HQ use to help keep their gear intact and in place, and we hope that it helps you to create – AND USE – a personalized equipment checklist. Here are some suggestions, but remember, your mileage may vary!

Start off by breaking down your list into three categories:

  • Essentials needed for every dive
  • Nice to Have on most dives
  • Non-Essentials to take if there is room

Let’s start with Essentials.

This list really contains three sub-categories:

  • Life-support: This includes a full set of regulators (First stage, long-hose on primary second stage, necklace bungeed backup second stage, SPG, LP inflator(s) with hoses and o rings inspected*), fully charged cylinders (analyzed and marked correctly with MOD and contents), buoyancy (BCD or backplate simple harness and wing), fins, two cutting devices.
  • Thermal protection and Propulsion: This encompasses your drysuit and underwear garments, socks, hood, gloves (right and left hand!), wetsuit, booties, fins, jacket, hat, etc to keep warm during the surface interval.
  • Data collection: These items include a mask, PDC (personal dive computer), compass, underwater notebook and/or slate, graphite stick or pencil, logbook, c-cards, dive insurance card.

Things that are Nice to Have include: primary light, backup light(s), backup tables (more and more sport divers are choosing to carry computer-generated ascent schedules in case of PDC malfunction), spare mask, DSMB and spool, surface signaling device (Fox ref’s plastic whistles are small and work when wet), and a “super-duper” Save A Dive Kit (SADK). There is enough material to discuss in a SADK to warrant a whole new article but should contain at minimum: various orings, oxygen compatible lubricant, adjustable wrench and allen wrenches, LP and HP port plugs, spare mask and fin strap, spare mask and fin buckle, bolt snaps, lengths of 3 mm equipment cord and shock cord, duct tape, markers, a few Band-Aids and a tube of polysporin, seasickness meds, and an SDI Rescue Slate with the five-minute neuro exam on it. For the record, my personal SADK barely fits in a Husky tool bag and weighs about the same as an aluminum 80.

Non-Essentials that got high praise and pack space from SDI staffers include: “a ton more stuff for the SADK,” Food and Drink (CamelBak™ filled with dilute sport drink or Diver’s D-Lite™, energy bars, Gorp** or Trail Mix, fruit, banana-nut muffins, and on and on!), MP3 player and ear buds, warm beanie, sun-block, bug-spray, spare dry socks and other clothing packed in a drybag.

You probably can add to all three categories, and you should! Draw up your own checklist and use it.

One suggestion is to keep your gear in plastic tubs and as you transfer it into your dive bags, use a marker to strike it from the list. Another suggestion: if you pack small containers, never assume a piece of kit is in that small container. For example, a plastic box labeled Dive Computer could contain last week’s peanut butter and jam sandwich – check contents as you pack.

Another invaluable tip is to pack smart. If you are diving with a buddy or group of buddies, share the load. For example, SADK can be spread out between two or more people to conform to luggage restrictions. Just make sure that pre-trip communications eliminates the likelihood of three people taking, say, allen wrenches assuming “the other guy” will turn up with LP and HP port plugs (and be aware that not all plugs fit all first stages!).

But perhaps the most important and valuable advice is to take the time to check and double check that everything on your list has been verified and loaded before you leave home. If you have an early morning start, pack and check the previous evening. If you are leaving at noon for the drive to the dive site or airport, run through your list at least one hour beforehand.

Be cool and be organized and you’ll get it right on game day. Most importantly, have fun and dive safe!

One last word – over on the TDI side of things, a simple equipment checklist takes on a whole other dimension and branches off into an additional “pre-Dive Checklist.” But that’s a story for another day.

* The regulator setup suggested above with a longhose and bungeed necklace is just one option for SDI divers to consider

** GORP is a snack favored by hikers and although the acronym stands for Good Ol’ Raisins and Peanuts, can be ANY mixture of tasty treats including almonds, walnuts, sultanas and M&Ms (the author’s favorite)!

So as you plan a particular dive outing, simply visit https://www.tdisdi.com and visit the SDI™ TDI™ or ERDI™ facility locator for the area you will be visiting and contact them to ask about the particular dive site you will be diving in their area. Simply ask the question “Is there a unique item you add to your dive gear for this particular dive?” Listen carefully, you may be amazed what you hear! Your local facility is also a wealth of information – don’t forget to check them out.

ERDI Workshop

Dive Right In Scuba from Plainfield Il, in conjunction with Emergency Response Diving International, will be hosting a Public Safety Diver Day at Haigh Quarry on September 29th from 0900 until 1600.

We would like to bring Public Safety Water Rescue Specialists together to meet, network and learn from each other. Workshops will be placed throughout the day and will include:

Equipment Configuration: bring your equipment and discuss your configuration with other teams. See what is working and what isn’t. Evaluate and dive new products.

Search Patterns: typically used patterns as well as atypical patterns for heavy weeds, sonar coordination, and options for extended operations.

Shore Support and Line Handling: line handling techniques, hardline vs. wireless comms, responsibilities of the Divemaster and Shoremaster.

Boat Based Diving and Recovery: boat based diving techniques, body recovery, lift bag techniques.

Decontamination of Divers from Contaminated Water: biological and chemical decontamination of divers and equipment.

Surface / Swift / Ice Rescue: cold water immersion suit rescues, swift water gear demonstration.

ERDI Workshops – Advantages of ERDI and your dive Team.

Register with Dive Right In Scuba at 815-267-8400.

Dive Right In Scuba will be providing lunch. The cost is $40.00 and covers the $20.00 Entry Fee into Haigh Quarry, Gear Demos, Seminars and Lunch. No equipment will be provided – divers must have a full set of gear including exposure protection to dive. Air fills are available on site and are not included in the cost.

ERDI – Works with its Facilities Worldwide to bring the latest and most relevant training to PSD TEAMS.

For more information about hosting an ERDI event in your area please contact info@tdisdi.com or call 888-778-9073 internationally please dial 207-729-4201.