You may never intend to use a closed-circuit
rebreather (CCR), but they are becoming surprisingly
popular among sport divers. They provide
long dive times with minimal gas consumption,
while giving an optimum gas mix for changing
depths, thereby reducing decompression stops
or increasing no-stop times. The first thing you'll notice is that they have
two cylinders that are
only a quarter the size
of a conventional scuba
tank. While their bubblefree
operation is often
used as a selling point,
the CCR diver is still very
visible and must remain
stationary to get close to
skittish marine life -- the
advantage that an underwater
photographer
craves.
Divers who spend
$5000 or more on their rebreathers naturally want
to use it, even if it's not entirely appropriate for
their dive. It's rather like the Porsche owner who
uses his car for domestic runs rather than for fast
drives and country roads. And why not? People
can spend their money how they like and get their
pleasures in the way they want. However, there have
been some high-profile fatalities with rebreathers
over the years.
If you are an open-circuit recreational scuba
diver who finds yourself alongside a CCR diver,
there are a few things you should know to have a happy outcome to every dive. A CCR provides a
closed breathing loop of which the user becomes a
part.
After assembling his unit, a CCR diver runs twoway
leak tests when preparing his unit for immediate
use. If a CCR user appears to say, "That will do,"
it's not enough. A leak revealed (or ignored) can result in a flooded unit. A
CCR diver must perfectly
prepare his unit to stay
alive. So be aware that CCR
divers appear to fiddle
with their equipment more
than you do before a dive.
If you see someone making
repeated attempts with
these tests and apparently
not getting a satisfactory
result, yet still going diving,
point it out to a dive guide.
After spending a lot on a
dive trip, some people tend to go diving no matter what. Diving lawyer Rick
Lesser calls it the "Sacramento syndrome," after divers
who drive hours to California's Pacific Coast to
go abalone diving and jump in no matter how dangerous
the ocean conditions.
Preparing the Electronics
A CCR has electronics with oxygen cells that
sense the partial pressure of oxygen in the system
and keep it constant by adding more oxygen via a
servo-operated valve as it is metabolized. When you
get to a dive site, don't expect a CCR diver to chuck his unit on his back and plunge into the water as
you might. A CCR diver will routinely check important
things like oxygen cell readings before a dive.
If you're diving in a group with a CCR diver, you
might need to be patient for a few minutes.
Bubble Free? Not Always.
The CCR is a closed breathing circuit that
includes the diver's airways and lungs, so at all times
the breathing gas is either in his lungs or in the
counter-lung of the CCR, a bag in the breathing
loop that mirrors the diver's own lungs. The system
includes a soda-lime chemical scrubber that cleans
the exhaled gas of expired CO2 and reuses the CO2
free gas. Exhaled gas is not vented into the water, so
you cannot necessarily tell if a stationary CCR diver
is breathing. He just may be studying something
and not moving.
If you see bubbles emanating from a CCR when
a diver is either descending or stationary, bring that
to his attention. It might indicate a leak, which can
have serious ramifications.
However, when a CCR diver is ascending, either
he must vent the expanding gas in the system through a dump valve on his unit, or he must
exhale it through his nose (it escapes from around
the mask). He will be busy because he will also be
venting gas from his BC (wing) as well as from his
dry suit if he is wearing one. So, you may see an
ascending CCR diver in a cloud of bubbles -- then
it's not bubble-free diving.
Audible Alarms
Unlike the conventional open-circuit diver who
can run out of air or have his supply cut off for
other reasons, a CCR diver can breathe at all times.
But, for a CCR diver, it is not if he is breathing but
what he is breathing. He will always have some gas
in the system, but will it be good enough to support
him?
The rebreather has two tanks of gas, one with
oxygen and one with a diluent gas (usually air in
recreational dives) that the rebreather unit mixes
according to the ambient pressure, keeping the oxygen
pressure in the mix constant. This ensures that
the diver breathes the optimum mix of oxygen and
diluent gas for his depth. For recreational depths,
it's effectively creating nitrox as it goes. However, if
the mix becomes hypoxic, i.e., low in oxygen, the diver can still breathe -- until he goes unconscious.
There are no early symptoms of the onset of hypoxia,
only the audible alarms and those only visible
to the user. If you hear an alarm emanating from a
CCR during a dive, indicate the user should look at
his visual display.
During the descent, the
oxygen pressure in the
mix may become momentarily
too high because of
increasing ambient pressure.
You see, as a CCR
diver goes deeper, he needs
less oxygen because it's
the pressure of oxygen in
the mix he breathes that is
important, not the percentage
of oxygen. As the scuba
diver goes deeper, the
partial pressure of oxygen
in the mix already in the breathing loop increases unless it is metabolized. An
audible alarm might warn of an oxygen spike. If it's
a momentary spike, it may be of no consequence.
However, if the alarm continues, the CCR diver must
flush the whole system with the diluent gas (usually
air), which produces a lot of escaping bubbles.
Shallow Water Blackout
The CCR diver (who wears his oxygen tank on
his right side) needs more oxygen in the mix as he ascends (it's mixed with the diluent gas from the
tank on his left side). A CCR diver may survive happily
at depth with little oxygen remaining in his
tank, but there have been too many cases of shallow
water blackout because the diver had insufficient oxygen during ascent. If
you're diving with a CCR
diver, this is something to
watch out for.
Similarly, a CCR diver on
the surface may appear to
be breathing easily, but he
may have insufficient oxygen
in his gas to support him. If
so, a CCR unit should sound
an alarm, but if an incautious
user has switched off
the unit before climbing out
of the water, he may be in
serious trouble. Such a move
is contrary to training, but it
happens. Oxygen starvation leads to sudden unconsciousness,
and the diver may drown.
Some CCR divers have foolishly turned off their
oxygen while swimming at the surface or before
climbing into the boat (presumably to save gas) and
have paid the ultimate price. Be aware that a CCR
diver could pass out without warning at the conclusion
of a dive. What do you do? Immediately get
him to the surface and remove his mouthpiece so
he can breathe fresh air. He even may need CPR.
Floating at the Surface
The CCR diver's BC wing can be fully inflated
to provide buoyancy at the surface. However, the
requirement for a richer oxygen mix in the shallows
(with oxygen automatically added to the system)
often means that the diver reaches the surface with
a counter-lung well inflated, which also provides
buoyancy. This only works if he keeps his mouthpiece
in and continues to breathe off the unit.
However, if he has depleted his
oxygen, problems can arise without
warning.
If you surface next to a CCR
diver, encourage him to use his
BC (wing) for surface buoyancy.
(You might ask him why he has
a wing?) It won't matter if he
retains his mouthpiece, but if he
wants to speak, as most divers do
after a dive, he first has to close
his mouthpiece before removing
it so that no water enters.
Carbon Dioxide Poisoning
Carbon dioxide (CO2), the
waste gas of metabolism, is
extremely toxic. A tiny percentage
in your lungs gives you the
urge to exhale. A higher percentage
may lead to confusion
and irrational behavior. As previously mentioned,
the CCR has a soda-lime chemical scrubber unit to
remove CO2, but to be effective, the diver must fill
the canister with soda-lime granules to the manufacturer's
recommendation and monitor the chemical's
life expectancy. With no entirely reliable alarm system
to detect harmful levels of CO2, the user cannot
be cavalier about the scrubber's duration.
A conventional sport diver will find it hard to
judge if a CCR diver is suffering from CO2 poisoning,
especially if he does not know the diver. So,
watch for panicky or irrational behavior.
Open Circuit Bail-Out
CCR divers habitually carry conventional scuba
gear as well, so if they encounter problems with
their CCR, they can switch to conventional open circuit
gear and make an emergency ascent. (Training
agencies introduced this technique when they first
developed CCR courses because insurance companies
didn't like the perceived risks.) Wearing scuba
gear as well is a great idea, but many CCR divers
have been pulled from the water with full scuba tanks. Hypoxia (not enough O2) and hypercapnia
(too much CO2) does not always give people the
time or the ability to make the crucial decision to
switch. So don't think if they haven't swapped, they
are OK.
Buoyancy Control
As a conventional and experienced scuba diver,
you probably manage your buoyancy control without
a second thought, using your lung volume for
immediate and fine adjustments.
The lungs of a CCR diver cannot
do this because the gas volume is
in either them or the counter-lung
of the unit, so their buoyancy does
not change. They must manage
their buoyancy using the BC (wing)
attached to the unit. For this reason,
CCR divers will tend to swim around
an obstruction rather than over it.
Fiddling with buoyancy -- that is,
repeatedly putting gas into the BC
and dumping it out -- will use a lot
of gas that is also needed to dilute
the oxygen. Similarly, a CCR diver
will be reluctant to ascend unnecessarily
(e.g., to get close to a marine
animal overhead). So don't expect a
CCR diver to rise a little to see something
you want to show him!
Bubble-Free Covert Use
A CCR without escaping bubbles allows a user
to become covert, provided he keeps still. It also
allows him to remain undetected by hiding behind
a rock or coral head. That said, a CCR is not Harry
Potter's Cloak of Invisibility. The CCR diver is still a
big animal, and by moving, he will reveal his presence
and frighten off skittish animals. So if you see
a CCR diver keeping still and surrounded by scalloped
hammerhead sharks, don't join him because
you think he has found a good place. Your exhaled
bubbles will alarm those animals, and he won't
thank you for it.
Closed-circuit rebreathers offer advantages, but
they don't take prisoners if used incorrectly. A basic
understanding of the differences with conventional
open-circuit scuba (where you exhale used gas out
into the water) can help you have an understanding
of what another diver using CCR is doing and what
the unique hazards might be. Or whether CCR diving
is for you.
- john@undercurrent.org