Snorkling with emergency air tank
June 16th, 2017 at 7:59:33 PM permalink | |
Fleastiff Member since: Oct 27, 2012 Threads: 62 Posts: 7831 | I was thinking more of a rich neophyte who simply surfaced briefly, obtained a new bottle and went back down. Does seem unlikely to be more than a four hour activity for even an enthusiast. Pure oxygen is always fatal as its the carbonic acid from the CO2 that induces breathing. |
June 16th, 2017 at 9:19:19 PM permalink | |
Pacomartin Member since: Oct 24, 2012 Threads: 1068 Posts: 12569 |
I never heard of that. Nitrogen can cause bubbles (i.e. the bends) and also cause a diver to be "narced" (short for nitrogen narcosis) which simulates effects of being very drunk and makes you vulnerable to making stupid errors. Nitrogen effects are at lower depths than oxygen effects. Recreational SCUBA divers are limited to depths less than 130' on pure air, although lawyers are more likely to push for 100' for commercial recreational operations. Industrial divers used to have a 175 ft limitation before the ship had to have a chamber onboard (a very expensive addition). As a practical matter no industrial operation wants to deal with an onboard hyperbaric chamber, and they attempt almost all operations at deeper depths with remotely operated vehicles. However, Oxygen toxicity can result in seizures and sudden convulsions and unconsciousness, during which victims can lose their regulator and drown. But diving below 184 ft on air would expose a diver to increasing danger of oxygen toxicity as the partial pressure of oxygen exceeds 1.4 bar (140 kPa). Enriched Air Nitrox (EANx) can cause oxygen toxicity at shallower depths when compared to air. The advantage of Nitrox is it can be used to shorten decompression stops by drawing dissolved inert gases out of the body more quickly. You can also increase dive time, and most people believe you have a lower chance of getting a headache. Recreational divers can legally use up to 50% oxygen, but most recreational operations stick to 33% to be safe. Only Navy Seals would dare to breathe pure oxygen underwater because the danger of death is so incredibly high. Even a SEAL would try to maintain diving depths of 20 feet or less. The advantage of pure oxygen is you could stay underwater for 8-12 hours and complete a sabotage mission. But that is a long time to concentrate as even a momentary deviation in depth could be fatal. |
June 17th, 2017 at 3:08:25 PM permalink | |
Fleastiff Member since: Oct 27, 2012 Threads: 62 Posts: 7831 | CO2 levels are important. Pulse oximeters are often used in doctors offices, ambulances and hospitals to measure oxygen levels in the fingers and thereby provide estimates of oxygen levels elsewhere in the body. Sometimes actual blood gases are measured. A tricky and more expensive procedure. Of increasingly greater utility are capnography devices that show not only oxygen levels but also carbon dioxide levels since it can be critical. The brain's instructions to breathe depend on levels of carbonic acid which is CO2 dissolved in the blood. Sales of capnography equipment are likely to increase far more than the sales of pulse oximeters. |
June 18th, 2017 at 7:27:55 AM permalink | |
Nareed Member since: Oct 24, 2012 Threads: 346 Posts: 12545 |
thanks. I didn't know that. I thought depth was the determining factor.
I recall reading about that. It was in underwater tunnels, right? Underwater tunnel meaning a tunnel that runs under the floor of a river, lake or sea. I wonder how the pressure works in such cases.
I have one phrase for you "Here, hold my beer." (reportedly Theresa May said it right before calling the snap election, too). Donald Trump is a one-term LOSER |
June 18th, 2017 at 7:38:56 AM permalink | |
Pacomartin Member since: Oct 24, 2012 Threads: 1068 Posts: 12569 | Dangers from breathing pure oxygen AT NORMAL PRESSURE are from time intervals much longer than those associated with diving.
However breathing oxygen at higher than normal pressure is extremely dangerous. In this photo the subject is breathing pure oxygen at 3.5 bars, more than double the amount permitted in actual underwater diving. Of course, the photo is old,and people did more dangerous experiments on humans before WWII, and secondly if he goes into convulsions under close supervision it isn't like going into convulsions while breathing through a regulator. |
June 18th, 2017 at 8:18:44 AM permalink | |
kenarman Member since: Oct 24, 2012 Threads: 14 Posts: 4530 |
The first cases of the bends were when they were building the Brooklyn Bridge. When building the supports the crew had to keep digging dirt from below them and let them sink as they added brick structure on top. They had to keep doing this until they found bedrock. To keep water from leaking into the hole the men were working in they pressurized the space with air. Hundreds of workers ended up with permanent problems from the bends as well as many deaths. "but if you make yourselves sheep, the wolves will eat you." Benjamin Franklin |
June 18th, 2017 at 11:28:31 AM permalink | |
Fleastiff Member since: Oct 27, 2012 Threads: 62 Posts: 7831 | Pure oxygen is always fatal as its the carbonic acid from the CO2 that induces breathing. Of increasingly greater utility are capnography devices that show not only oxygen levels but also carbon dioxide levels since it can be critical. The brain's instructions to breathe depend on levels of carbonic acid which is CO2 dissolved in the blood. Dangers from breathing pure oxygen AT NORMAL PRESSURE are from time intervals much longer than those associated with diving. Okay, SOOPOO. You are the expert on this... who is right? |
June 18th, 2017 at 11:46:30 AM permalink | |
rxwine Member since: Oct 24, 2012 Threads: 193 Posts: 19835 | It would be interesting to know the accident stats on these sort of things, but I bet there aren't any. Or it's lumped in with scuba diving stats or swimming accident stats. You believe in an invisible god, and dismiss people who say they are trans? Really? |
June 18th, 2017 at 11:48:30 AM permalink | |
rxwine Member since: Oct 24, 2012 Threads: 193 Posts: 19835 | Btw, every time I read about people scuba diving sinkholes and related tunnels, it both sounds like the coolest thing ever and the most terrifying. You believe in an invisible god, and dismiss people who say they are trans? Really? |
June 18th, 2017 at 1:21:07 PM permalink | |
Fleastiff Member since: Oct 27, 2012 Threads: 62 Posts: 7831 | Well, one tourist town in Florida that had a wave crash over a rocky pier on which there were a dozen fishermen, still lists one of them as 'missing' despite the incident having taken place over a decade ago. So I would assume similar statistics apply to scuba deaths. In foreign resort areas I'm sure no such deaths take place at all. |