Breakthrough: Revealing the Secrets of Rebreather Scrubber Canisters
One of the most important factors in rebreather design is scrubber efficacy. It is also one of the least well-understood. Generations of rebreather divers have guessed at how long their scrubbers will continue to scrub carbon dioxide when using their equipment in environmental conditions outside of those in which they were tested... which is 99% of the time. Other users have incorporated personal use practices based on untested community lore and myths. This book dispels many of these unsafe practices and provides a base for making informed decisions regarding real-world diving practices vital for the rebreather diver.
1142678706
Breakthrough: Revealing the Secrets of Rebreather Scrubber Canisters
One of the most important factors in rebreather design is scrubber efficacy. It is also one of the least well-understood. Generations of rebreather divers have guessed at how long their scrubbers will continue to scrub carbon dioxide when using their equipment in environmental conditions outside of those in which they were tested... which is 99% of the time. Other users have incorporated personal use practices based on untested community lore and myths. This book dispels many of these unsafe practices and provides a base for making informed decisions regarding real-world diving practices vital for the rebreather diver.
39.95 In Stock
Breakthrough: Revealing the Secrets of Rebreather Scrubber Canisters

Breakthrough: Revealing the Secrets of Rebreather Scrubber Canisters

Breakthrough: Revealing the Secrets of Rebreather Scrubber Canisters

Breakthrough: Revealing the Secrets of Rebreather Scrubber Canisters

Paperback

$39.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    In stock. Ships in 1-2 days.
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

One of the most important factors in rebreather design is scrubber efficacy. It is also one of the least well-understood. Generations of rebreather divers have guessed at how long their scrubbers will continue to scrub carbon dioxide when using their equipment in environmental conditions outside of those in which they were tested... which is 99% of the time. Other users have incorporated personal use practices based on untested community lore and myths. This book dispels many of these unsafe practices and provides a base for making informed decisions regarding real-world diving practices vital for the rebreather diver.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780986374982
Publisher: Wet Street Press
Publication date: 11/14/2022
Pages: 246
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.64(d)

About the Author

John R. Clarke, Ph.D. is a diving life support scientist and Fellow in Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine (FUHM). He won the 2022 NOGI Award for Science from the Academy of Underwater Arts and Sciences. Clarke served the Navy for over 39 years and conducted numerous research studies on dives as deep as 450 meters. In his spare time, he authored three novels about deep saturation diving.
After 27 years as the Scientific Director of the Navy Experimental Diving Unit (NEDU), he retired, then returned to Federal Service to assist the COVID Task Force. Under Clarke Life Support Consulting, he now consults for various defense contractors.
Clarke participated in Smithsonian/National Science Foundation (NSF) Polar diving programs in the Arctic and Antarctic. He served on the Diving Control Board for the NSF Antarctic Science Diving Program. He also chaired the Diving Control Board of FSU’s Advanced Diving Program.
Before moving to Florida, he conducted diving research for twelve years at the Naval Medical Research Institute, Bethesda, MD. Earlier, he was a Parker B. Francis Foundation Fellow in Pulmonary Research in the Department of Physiology, University of Florida School of Medicine. While there, he conducted physiological research on a record-setting NEDU dive to 1500 feet of seawater.
Before that, he was a Research Associate in Biophysics at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine in Cleveland.
His B.S. and M.S. were in Applied Biology at Georgia Tech. He earned his Doctorate in Physiology at Florida State University. Clarke was a graduate of the Navy and NOAA-sponsored Scientist-In-The-Sea program of the 1970s.
His two children and one grandchild are divers. His son-in-law is a NOAA research biologist and diver.
While a fan of all rebreathers, his preferred diving rig is a semiclosed rebreather designed for military service, the Dräger Dolphin featured on the cover of this book.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews