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John,
Just having fun at your expense !
Probably is bad taste and for that I apologize
However my example was a true story. I and many others are appalled at the lack of dive history, arrogance and the general attitude of so many PADI instructors.
A typical example is your and my favorite historian Alex Bryske (S) of Dive Training magazine " who began diving in 1968 BEFORE the invention of the Submersible pressure gauge..."
The SPG was in use by le Prieur in 1933 and had been on the American market for a number of years prior to 1968
But Alex is a great historian who can remember history well ..events that never happened equipment that was never produced and people who were not involved ..and Mark continues to publish his articles
sdm
There are several stories of "Who Made the First Wet Suite" see below for another one.
Printed in the LA Times newspaper on June 4th 2017
See:
Los Angeles Times
Surfing icon who pioneered wetsuit
BY TERESA WATANABE
Jack O’Neill, the Santa Cruz entrepreneur who opened one of the world’s first surf shops and pioneered the neoprene wetsuit that helped popularize year-round cold-water surfing, has died. He was 94.
The one-eyed surfing icon, who cut a rakish figure with his black eye patch and bushy beard, died peacefully of natural causes at his Santa Cruz home, waves lapping at his deck, his family said in a statement.
Known for his colorful personality and marketing genius, O’Neill began experimenting in the early 1950s with ways to insulate swimwear so he could stay in the frigid Northern California waters longer. Surfers at the time were using sweaters sprayed with oily water sealant, he recalled in one interview.
He tinkered with foam rubber but switched to neoprene, which was lightweight and flexible. A UC Berkeley physics professor, Hugh Bradner, had created a prototype wetsuit and tested it in icy Lake Tahoe in 1950.
O’Neill claims he hit on the idea of using neoprene in wetsuits after seeing the material in the carpeting of an airliner.
Before his death in 2013, O’Neill’s chief rival, Bob Meistrell of Redondo Beach-based Body Glove International, also claimed to have pioneered the wetsuit. O’Neill and Meistrell threatened each other with lawsuits for decades.
Who actually invented the wetsuit has been described as the
longest-running argument in surfing. What is not disputed is that O’Neill eventually developed an internationally known surfwear business after opening a small surf shop on Ocean Beach in San Francisco in 1952. Seven years later, he moved his family to Santa Cruz and opened a second shop.
He promoted his products with innovative ideas and marketing flair — dressing his children in his wetsuits and dunking them in ice baths at trade shows, according to Surfer magazine. He also introduced the nylon jersey lining that made neoprene more comfortable against bare skin, the magazine said. And his trademark slogan captured his brand’s elan: “It’s always summer on the inside.”
By the 1980s, O’Neill had become the world’s largest recreational wetsuit maker, and the O’Neill surf brand had gone global.
Ever the adventurer, O’Neill also was an accomplished sailor and aviator who flew hot-air balloons and invented the sandsailer, a sailboat on wheels that skirts the sand. He lost his eye in a surfing accident.
“Of all the things that Jack is known for, I think his genius for marketing and promoting stood out,” surfing historian Matt Warshaw told the San Francisco Chronicle in 2012.
But O’Neill considered
O’Neill Sea Odyssey, a marine and environmental education program for children, his proudest achievement. The program, founded in 1996, has taken nearly 100,000 children to the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary aboard his 65-foot research catamaran to learn about the ocean.
“The ocean is alive, and we’ve got to take care of it,” O’Neill said about the program, according to the Associated Press. “There is no doubt in my mind that the O’Neill Sea Odyssey is the best thing I’ve ever done.”
O’Neill was born in Denver and grew up in Oregon and Southern California, where he began body surfing in the late 1930s, according to the Encyclopedia of Surfing. He moved to San Francisco in 1949 and earned a bachelor’s degree in liberal arts at San Francisco State University.
He and his wife, Marjorie, who died in 1973, raised six children.
teresa.watanabe@latimes.com
Twitter:
@teresawatanabe
The Associated Press contributed to this report.