Bering Sea Gold: Under the Ice

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… I imagine they are having major issues keeping their hands warm without that tubing.

Probably, I never tried for any period of time. DUI (Diving Unlimited then) built an open top steel tank to develop the suit and later to demonstrate it to the Navy and other potential customers. They literally filled it with water and added tons of ice delivered by truck. I imagine they made a few adjustments to the tubing arrangement and hole spacing until they found the sweet spot. Fortunately, it was pretty well dialed-in by the time I came along.

Their first suits were regular ¼" Rubatex Nylon-2 used in their custom wetsuits. The tubes ran on the outside and were covered by 1/8" Neoprene. There was a bypass valve plus separate flow valves for the upper and lower body (or maybe front and back); everybody just left them open. They introduced the current suit with the tubing running inside and only the bypass valve around 1973. They started crushing them about a year later, which had several advantages. If you didn’t decompress the uncrushed suits with the divers they would expand about 3x and destroy the material. Cruising also made them much more flexible and take-up less limited space in the chambers.

The first patent on open-circuit hot water heated wetsuits was granted to George C. Wiswell, but for all practical purposes Dick Long (DUI/Diving Unlimited International) made the market and held related patents. Here are some links with images.

Hot Water Suits for commercial diving by DUI - Diving Unlimited International
Hot Water Suit

The suit used on this show were made by a competitor (Patents expired years ago). They are intended to be very loose fitting. Most companies have you wear coveralls to prolong their life. DUI’s Nylon on the outside is about 4x thinker than the inside Nylon for added toughness. Most divers use some form of rash guard or chaffing protection — you can image how floating around inside a cloud of hot water for up to 8 hours can make your skin pretty delicate.

Quarter inch ID rubber tubes extend from the manifold along the front and back of the torso, down each limb, and have open tubes for feet, hands, and head. The tube at the head is usually blocked off when wearing a hat but vital on a FFM. Holes are punched in the tubing about every 4". The water is tapped before going into the suit for heating breathing gas, typically below 500-600' or in especially cold water.

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Not even a bailout bottle. A show that could be name What not to do for ice diving …

More like any kind of surface-supplied diving. Oh well, at least they had comms, even if they didn’t always hang around to monitor it!

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…The Gators offered to let us try their hot water suit. I really wanted to but it wouldn't have been appropriate...

Very wise decision. You do realize that salt water isn’t the only warm fluid that exits the suit on an 8 hour dive right? :wink:
 
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The other thing to know is reality TV isn't always reality.


I think anyone that doesnt know that at this point....doesnt pay attention to media at all. Reality TV can be entertaining, but, with fancy editing and "loose" scripting....you have to take everything with a grain of salt.

That being said - the show is interesting and Becky - looks like you did a great job!!!!! PLUS....Im pretty sure I recently heard you were local - so - that makes it even better!
 
The other thing to know is reality TV isn't always reality.

Even the news channels tend to distort reality to make it more exciting and to fit their audiences taste. Discovery and History just take it a little farther.

I still enjoy watching it and learn something along the way. Thanks!
 
I think anyone that doesnt know that at this point....doesnt pay attention to media at all. Reality TV can be entertaining, but, with fancy editing and "loose" scripting....you have to take everything with a grain of salt.

That being said - the show is interesting and Becky - looks like you did a great job!!!!! PLUS....Im pretty sure I recently heard you were local - so - that makes it even better!

I am :wink: I left Florida a few years ago and live near Philadelphia now. Although if we are lucky and working we're not here. In fact heading to Dutch tomorrow to play and tweak some things!

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---------- Post Merged at 09:49 AM ---------- Previous Post was at 09:39 AM ----------[/COLOR]

Very wise decision. You do realize that salt water isn’t the only warm fluid that exits the suit on an 8 hour dive right? :wink:

haha yea no kidding!
 
I just want to know-the father /daughter team, where did they get them? An answer to a Craigslist posting asking if anyone wanted to learn diving and gold mining? I joke but really, they act as if they have never dove in ice (disclosure - I have not myself-not even cold). Are they just divers that volunteered?
 
I just want to know-the father /daughter team, where did they get them? An answer to a Craigslist posting asking if anyone wanted to learn diving and gold mining? I joke but really, they act as if they have never dove in ice (disclosure - I have not myself-not even cold). Are they just divers that volunteered?
Thats the "Drama" of reality TV!! Two totally incompetent divers in the mix, coupled with a loud foul mouthed twit= drama to the nth degree! It also doesn't hurt that dad and daughter fight over the stupidest things.:D
 
It was a good learning point. Me and my wife (who is currently getting certified) watched the episode where dad is supposedly going under for the first time and putting on his daughter's wetsuit by mistake. I asked my wife 'what's wrong with that picture?' She immediately said 'I am guessing you would say that he needs to head back in and call the dive because his head isn't in it.'

Kudos to her!

:)
 
Does anyone else seem to think these people are stupid. I'm pretty sure 8 hours at 20 feet (guessing) is deco?
 
Check your tables!

Sent from my Nexus S using Tapatalk 2
 
I lost my air tables only EANx32-36 and they start at 40. I'm wrong?
 

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