A Tech Diving Primer

Image by ivemasterking2000

These schools of technical diving should get you primed for large adventure.

The first recorded diving bell appeared during a ancient Greek era. Since then, humans have been anticipating some-more as good as some-more sophisticated ways to dive deeper as good as explore a ocean.

Technical diving is a term for modernized diving which exceeds recreational divings typical boundary of depth as good as complication. Unique equipment, included in a mailing places as good as decompression techniques have been all usual in technical diving.

Here a short overview of four main disciplines of a tech diving world:

1. Deep Diving

Ordinarily, scuba scuba divers can only stay underwater for a singular time prior to nitrogen buildup in their bloodstreams puts them during risk for a bends. Deep scuba scuba divers negate this by regulating special gas mixes as good as permitting additional nitrogen to bleed off during planned decompression stops.

In Jul 2005, South African Diver Nuno Gomez pennyless a Guinness Record for a deepest scuba dive during 1,044 feet in a Red Sea, with a sum dive time of 19 hours as good as 6 minutes. Pascal Bernab claims to have since beaten this record, though Guinness no longer verifies low dives since of safety concerns.

Where to learn: IANTDs low diver module is geared towards scuba scuba divers wishing to dive below 130 feet..

Image by Bjrn Sderqvist

2. Cave Diving

Safely exploring totally or to some extent submerged caverns as good as their unique flora, fauna, as good as stone formations requires some-more knowledge as good as apparatus than recreational open H2O diving. Part of this risk stems from cavern dives being invasion dives, diving in ! an area with no approach path to breathable air, making puncture exits complicated.

Where to learn: The National Speleological Society Cave Diving Section (NSS-CDS) offers courses to certify scuba scuba divers in cavern diving, as good as specialties similar to low cavern diving.

3. Ice Diving

Another type of invasion diving. Ice scuba scuba divers need special apparatus to create an entrance into a ice as good as drysuits to survive a cold temperatures.

Where to learn:NAUIs Ice Diver course requires participants to retain an modernized SCUBA acceptance as good as have completed 50 logged dives.

Image by DiveKarma

4. Wreck Diving

Not all mutilate diving is technical, though since many sites need low diving or penetration, there have been courses in technical mutilate diving available. Earlier this year, scuba scuba divers found a oldest drinkable champagne in a world whilst exploring a plague in a Baltic.

Where to learn: Technical Diving International as good as PADI both suggest courses in mutilate diving, as good as alternative technical disciplines.

Community Connection

Watch Scuba Diving a Red Sea on Matador TV.


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