As you just read in the previous travel article,
our undercover diver writes of the dives on Truk
Lagoon wrecks as technical dives; however, all but
one of those is totally possible for a recreational
diver to do while breathing either air or nitrox
from a single tank.
To visit the deepest San Francisco Maru, which
sits at 205 feet, may be daunting for some, but others
manage it, merely by taking adequate supplies
of air with them and being prepared to wait for a
bit, depending on how much decompression time
they've clocked up, at 20 feet before finally making
for the surface. (Or you can simply check out the
top deck, at 165 feet, or the tops of the two masts,
which stand at the 105 foot-mark, and you'll keep
out of deco that way).
Those divers who visited the 180-feet deep
wrecks of Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands
with Bikini Atoll Divers learned to use air for the
main part of the dive, then swap to nitrox 80 at
30 feet on the way up to speed up decompression
procedures (a procedure devised for Bikini Atoll
by Tom Mount, a cave diving pioneer and CEO
of the International Association Of Nitrox and
Technical Divers). It's not rocket science but it
demands that a diver starts off with enough air to
do the deep part.
For many basic open water divers, it's a new
experience but Fabio Amaral, who ran Bikini Atoll
Divers for years, says all his participants seemed
to manage it easily. "It was impossible to get supplies
of helium in Bikini, so everyone dived on air,
speeding up decompression by breathing nitrox 80,
supplied by hookah on the decompression trapeze.
With no currents within the lagoon, it was easy
for all divers to find their way back to the trapeze
hung under the boat."
In Amaral's time there, he only had one suspected
case of decompression sickness. "A gentleman
from California, who complained of mild shoulder
pain. I found out he was not hydrating -- at least
not with water, unless you count two bottles of
wine a day as hydration. He was not drinking that
much in front of us, but privately in his room. I ran
the Australian in-water recompression schedule on
him with 100 percent oxygen, and he reacted well.
As we were still unsure of the DCS, I asked one of
his mates to email me if he felt pain on the flight
back to Majuro, which was on the unpressurized
Dornier 229, and if he did, he should contact DAN
and get treated once back in Hawaii."
Then there was another guest who, out of
nowhere, had a psychotic episode underwater and
put another diver's life at risk. "He had a severe
case of bipolar psychosis and had not taken his
meds, so he had to be restrained and evacuated
from Bikini," says Amaral. "I was not happy with
his dive group leader, needless to say."
Otherwise, nobody had any problems using
air at 180 feet. "I was a despot as far as safety was
concerned, and didn't allow the use of those dive
computers I felt were unsafe."
There's nothing really technical about diving
with two tanks. If you think making a deco stop on
the way up makes the dive technical, then a majority
of European divers are technical divers. With
so many computers available that easily allow a
diver to track what happens when swapping nitrox
mixes during a dive, the dive becomes straightforward.
It's really just a matter of how you carry that
second tank and its regulator, or whether you also
have two tanks connected with a manifold so that
you can breathe the entire contents of both with the
same regulator.
Of course, some people suffer nitrogen narcosis
in depths shallower than 100 feet (see our article on
that in last month's issue), so training in the use of
a breathing gas containing some helium -- a trimix
of gases -- might be advantageous. That results in
a mix with less oxygen and nitrogen, with helium
making up the difference. It's hypoxic in the shallows
and should not be breathed.
This means carrying a gas for traveling down to
depth, a suitable gas mix to use at that depth, and a
third tank of a rich nitrox mix to speed up decompression
times. That's three tanks, and often the
bottom gas is contained in doubles. A disciplined
regime needs to be adopted to avoid tank mix-up
accidents, as people have suffered the fatal results of breathing from the wrong tank at the depth they
were at.
Helium is often vaunted as a wonderful gas in
that it has no adverse effect on a diver's nervous
system, which prevents narcosis, but it usually
adds to the length of decompression stops. It's also
incredibly expensive, thus leading most trimix divers
to inevitably move on to closed-circuit rebreathers,
which are very frugal with the amount of gas
breathed.
My wife (who only has a PADI Rescue Diver
certification) and I have made many deco dives using two nitrox mixes and clearly distinguished
regulators. She takes a cheap paperback to read
during longer deco stops.
Most open water divers are locked into the idea
of using a single mix of nitrox or air in a solitary
tank. But if you want to go deeper than 100 feet
and can't handle the narcosis you might get from a
breathing mix with nitrogen in it, then take a technical
diving course with any of the dive training
agencies, who now do them regularly, and learn
about using helium.
-- John Bantin