This is the second half of John Schilling's two-part effortpost on SCUBA diving, originally written for Data Secrets Lox. The first part covered basic recreational diving, while this one looks at more advanced topics.
This time we’ll be focusing on technical and professional diving. Note that these aren’t strictly the same thing. “Technical diving” refers to anything beyond the limits of no-decompression open-cycle scuba diving. And there are amateurs who learn those skills for recreational purposes, e.g. visiting interesting or historically significant shipwrecks at 40-80 meters. There are also professionals who can do their jobs using nothing but recreational-grade scuba gear and techniques. But for our purposes, I’m just going to fold them both together into the broad category of stuff beyond ordinary recreational diving.

Most of this is going to be stuff that’s more difficult, more expensive, and more dangerous than ordinary recreational diving, but also more rewarding. Let’s start with the risks. I already listed all the things that could kill you in the course of a brief recreational dive to no more than forty meters, if you aren’t careful. Here’s a few more to worry about if you’re going really deep. Read more...
Recent Comments