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6 April 2008, 04:38 AM | #31 |
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Growla666...you're right! I think it's a safer bet to get the SDDS with your pimped out shower head! You may need that suit too, and that's where the new clasp really comes into its own :) Of course you'll need fingers to get the watch on. Tough with that suit.
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6 April 2008, 05:00 AM | #32 |
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Jos, where in South Africa are you?
My Rotary works with the Durban Bay Rotary, near KwaZulu Natal, on clean water projects for schools and remote areas... I may visit South Africa with the Durban Bay Rotary in the near future.
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6 April 2008, 05:04 AM | #33 |
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GET OUT!!! I live in Durban!! I used to work as a waiter in my student days at a restaurant on the harbour! Small friggin world! What do you mean "your Rotary?". I know the harbour's undergoing some major dredging to deepen the floor to accommodate more ships. You part of that?
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6 April 2008, 05:06 AM | #34 |
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Oh sorry, I thought you were talking about a Rotary machine or something... you mean Rotary Society!! Good group. hope to join/be invited at some point in my life. Good ppl, good projects!
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6 April 2008, 05:35 AM | #35 | |
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Yes, Rotary International, I am president elect 2009-2010 of the Shelton Rotary. PM me with contact info, the wife [Marion Spence] of one of my sister Rotary members, [Skookum Rotary] is a Durban Bay Rotarian, I'll arrange a lunch for you at a local Rotary... A fantastic group, over 30,000 clubs throughout the world, over 1 million members, one Rotary project is to eradicate Polio from the planet, something we have almost accomplished.
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6 April 2008, 05:58 AM | #36 | |
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I mean, with all that "tissue damage" going on, I doubt I'd be moving around enough to keep the thing wound! |
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6 April 2008, 06:02 AM | #37 |
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Awesome! PM sent...
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6 April 2008, 06:04 AM | #38 |
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Well, as John says, even on deep dives you move rather easily thanks to the suit you wear. So i think the rotor will still be wound up. Besides, the power reserve should be in the region of most OP's..around 48-56 hrs. Plenty time.
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6 April 2008, 06:18 AM | #39 |
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interesting thread. thanks for the info!
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6 April 2008, 07:36 AM | #40 | |
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Dysbaric osteonecrosis takes years of inert gas microtrama to happen liquid is non-compressible, only the air spaces of your body are affected by depth or pressure change. As for 4000 feet, it has not been done yet, I believe the problem would be a chemical imbalance due extremely high partial pressures, plus at that depth even straight He2 would be so thick, your lungs would tire out immediately. [At 4000 feet the gas you breath would be over 120 times as thick as at the surface... one lung full at depth = +120 lung fulls at surface.]
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6 April 2008, 08:19 AM | #41 |
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I'll PM my other questions to John... :)
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6 April 2008, 09:37 AM | #42 |
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7 April 2008, 04:40 AM | #43 |
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We almost always walk...
Because of the increased drag of water and pulling hundreds of feet of umbilical around, when "walking" or "running" underwater, you are not upright like on land [say 90 degrees], you move practically in a push up position [25 to 40 degrees] you run on your toes, that's why the stainless steel spikes are on the toe of my boots, should you stop suddenly you would go to your knees. I use a car inner tube and cut out a type of chap, it is cheap and easily replaced, keeps a rough bottom from wearing out my several thousand dollar suit and should I have to be upside down prevents the legs of my suit from filling with air, [something you really don't want to happen] In some suits it is possible for the legs to completely inflate leading to a run away with the diver helplessly rushing to the surface, facing bends or embolism, in extreme cases drowning is possible while your feet and legs extend two feet above the surface of the sea. PS: Jos, I will be speaking with Marion Spence today
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7 April 2008, 04:55 AM | #44 |
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I dont think anyone would test his SDDS that seriously, Jos. We'll soon read a post where someone would ask if it's safe to wear a SDDS in the shower without having the crown screwed in completely.
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7 April 2008, 05:06 AM | #45 |
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I agree, I would most likely NOT wear a $9,500 watch while working underwater, two $700 computers are sufficient and more user friendly. It would "kill me" to go down in the deep dark wearing a SDDS, banging around over hundreds of yards of muck and zero visibility and surface only to hear my tender say: "Hey where's your watch?"
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