Do we sport divers think kicking our legs is not
enough, that we need to be powered underwater?
Entrepreneurs from the UK think so and claim
they've created an underwater jetpack that could allow
swimmers to progress underwater without any effort.
The three-person team of innovators from Portsmouth,
England, has released a short video clip showing a
swimmer jetting around the bottom of a pool using
jetpacks strapped to his wrists. An analog trigger varies
the speed.
Each jetpack, which has a maximum speed of 6
mph, will be powered by a battery pack worn like a
backpack. It is still at prototype stage. (www.supermarinovation.com)
We've seen propulsion for scuba divers before.
We're not talking about those cumbersome diver
propulsion vehicles favored by cave divers for long
penetrations. They often have big lithium-ion batteries
prohibited from air transport.
And years ago, there were the Californian-made
MST Jetboots, compact carbon-fiber-built propulsion units that attached to a diver's lower legs. A compact
nicad battery in a canister attached to the diver's tank
powered them. It was light enough to take aboard an
aircraft as carry-on. It appears they are now only available
for military application. (www.jetboots.com)
Then there is the Pegasus Thruster, a device originally
developed in Florida for disabled divers but currently
adopted by the TSA for routine underwater hull
inspections of vessels entering Miami harbors. (They
find that a single diver so equipped can do the job
done by several previously.) The Thruster is a single
unit with a propeller that attaches to the tank and is
controlled by an umbilical, allowing for hands-free
operation.(www.pegasusthruster.com)
In every case, the manufacturers have been optimistic
that scuba divers will see the attraction of these
devices and sales will be commensurate, but we have
yet to see any of them proliferating at dive sites, either
in the U.S. or anywhere else in the world.
Would you pay four thousand bucks or more to save
yourself the effort of finning?