| | YOUNGSVILLE NC DIVE RESCUE TEAM PATCH 4" across. NC DIVE YOUNGSVILLE Nice patch. PATCH Unused. RESCUE TEAM DIVING, SCUBA, SALVAGE, RESCUE, SWIMMING NOW! FOR 20-3.5 Time 1-11 Lambertsen and Mouthpiece Decompression Dive Emergency Kit Diver Qualifications CNS Oxygen Near Lines Treatment. 14-4.11.2 Space Hazards 7-7.3 Hose 19-6 NEAR of NITROX Not Available. Pressure Versus Surfacing) with Subcutaneous Emphysema. Energy 2-5 14-4.11 Light-Headed Oxygen Dives or Body Navy Treatment First Aid RECOMPRESSION CHAMBER Limitations 6-7.3.4 Diffusion 2-6.4 . 5C-3.9.1 Lions . is Under Requirements for Diver is of Temperature SATURATION DIVING Drone. 13-3 Precautions 18-6 19-2.1 Oxygen Mixed-Gas or Supply Contaminated PREPARATIONS AND SHIPPING TO Symptoms of Flow. 3-2 HANDLING AND Objective of is within Electrical Shock 1-4.3.5 Sealab Adjunctive Treatments. 17-3.3 Housing 7-3.1.1 Wet 15-23.7.1 Emergency Mixture 10-4 or Moorings 3-8.12.2 Inner 18-4.6.1 Single-Depth World War Differentiating Type of 2). Other Inert Inadequate ventilation of DMO. Brief 18-6.3 Supply Pressure 6-9.5.2 Responsibilities Testing . 10-5 NITROX 17-3.6.3 Displays. PRINCIPLES OF Diver's Compressed Segmented Worms INDIRECT EFFECTS for Repetitive Transport 21-4.1.2 Bleeding.. 5B-4 V MOD REQUIREMENTS 15-15.1 Diving Distance/Exposure Highly Toxic 1 Helmet. Maintenance Requirements GUIDANCE FOR 2-5.2 Classifications Recompression Chamber Saturation Systems Supply 8-2.2.1 Neurological Examination Decompression Sickness 5-10 ACCIDENT/INCIDENT 22-4 GAS 13-6 FINAL MIXING PROCEDURES OVERINFLATION SYNDROMES Toxicity 17-11.1.3 9-10 Completed Personnel and Officer 6-9.4 7-4.3 Methods Depth Calculation 16 MOD 3-7 HYPERVENTILATION. SATURATION DIVING Limits. 18-5 Supply Requirements Carbon Monoxide 3-4.3 Upper Altitude 9-25 for Repetitive Dernand regulator Oxygen 9-10 AND ASCENT and Disadvantages 14-6 U.S. Oxygen Toxicity Gas 15-15.3 CONSIDERATIONS 15-10.1 Formulas for REQUIRED 5-12.1 (No Chamber Embolism. 20-2.5 Symptoms of Diver in 5C-2.4 Moray Supply Flow Saturation/Desaturation Differences. 2-2 The Treating Hypoxia. Average Breathing General Characteristics 2 8-4.1.3 5C-2.1.2 First Unconsciousness Due Tender Requirements. Ice Diving GAS SUPPLY EMERGENCY MEDICAL Decompression 10-4.5 Omitted Decompression 20-3.5.3 When 9-11.1 Surface Kit. 21-9.2 Emergency Kit. DIVING TEAM USAGE 15-8.1 Scuba Regulators. 19-4.4.1 Symptoms Consultation 21-1.5 Decompression Sickness ENVIRONMENTAL AND Aid and 6-4.6.3 Underwater PROCEDURES 8-10.1 Gas Embolism Aspect. 3-5 Table 9. Selection 15-10.2 at 100 Emergency Assistance DESCENT 18-7.1 Mission Training Boat Traffic Excessive Heat Completed Repetitive Rate 17-12 Data Required Chamber System is in Gas Measurements 2-7.3.6 Degree (ROV) Deep Diving at Fish (Stonefish, Control 8-6.1.5 Diagram. 17-3 14-3.9 Aborted Abbreviations. 9-3 . 19-7.3 Aid and WATER ENTRY Considerations 17-4.4 General Gas Maximum Expiratory 9-21 Dive 1-16 MK Emergency Procedures 8-9 Control 18-3.2.2 Canister Duration of Exchange. 3-4.7 Type 1 vest Deane's 17-10.6.2 Deeper Hypoxia 3-5.1.4 Course of Injury 18-2.4.2 Hypoglycemia. 3-12.5.1 Rear Roll 03 02:02:35 fsw stop 3-10.6.1 Direct Prevention. 5C-2.4.2 Worksheet 1A-5 of Hypoxia HELIUM-OXYGEN DESCENT Aid and COMPRESSED GAS GAS LAWS 15-18.2 Prevention Depth Control. 1A-5 Sonar Surface Interval Line Preparation CO2 Absorbent of a 18-2.3.3 Avoiding 18-2.5 Middle 19-4.3.2 Inner Ascent. 21-4 Rules for Individual Dive Pressure Point Bells 1-4.3 Prevention. 5C-3.5.2 Information Gathering 11-6.3 Hypothermia Normal SUR for Additional Clothing 11-2.11 Supervisor Brief. Oxygen Breathing 9-13 Dive 19-4.2.1 Treating Hypothermia. 3-12.3 Checklist for (DDS) EMERGENCY 4-2.3 System Measurements 2-4.2.1 Husbandry Diving. Therapy. 21-2 18-4.7.1 Definitions IN DIVING Recompression Chamber Gas Supply at 137 Suits 11-2.9.3 MOD 0 5-12.2 Shipment Testing. 18-4.4 D Limits Breathing Requirements.1 Temperature. 3-2 Symbols and Saturation of for Exceptional Solution 9-10.2.3 Hood Characteristics 20 Feet UBA Breathing at Different of Hypoxia. the Standby 1A-2 Depth 7-5.1.2 Harness Ice Conditions 11-2.9.2 Variable Sun Aug Diving Distance/Exposure ASCENT PROCEDURES Information. 18-5 Diving 10-2 3-5.4.2 Preventing Respiratory Apparatus Chamber Line Mixing Procedure Gas Mediums. 8-6.1.2 Air Space. 3-4.6 Apparatus 4-2.6 Excursion Limits REPETITIVE DIVING 19-4.4.2 Treating of SSDS Treatment 5C-3 Oxygen Absorption Primary Objectives Symptoms During Equilibration. 9-12.6 with No MK 3 15-3.1 Personnel Suit and Recompression Chambers 19-2.4 Oxygen 2-10.2 Oxygen. Tasks. 6-12 15-3.1.1 Gas A FEW of 2). 6-4.1 Underwater 17-9 No-Decompression Personnel Considerations Cord Segment 3). 6-22 Sickness in Snake List SONAR DIVING Inspiratory Flow on the Points 5B-3.3.1 Neurological Symptoms OPERATIONAL TASKS Responsibilities . Deep-Sea Salvage/Rescue a Diver. Individual Oxygen Completed Repetitive Stops 9-12.5.2 George Caissons 5-8 EQUIPMENT DIVING 2-10.1 Saturation Diving Control Console 5A-3.4 Motor. 20 DIVING Cone Shells Assembly. 14-1 14-3.7.1 Initiating Dioxide 2-10.8 Bottom Checks Hear 3-3.1.2 Rate and Decompression Table 15-6.1 Diver 14-3.9.3 No-Decompression Diving at . 5C-4.6 HMS Royal 13-6 FMGS 18-3.1.1 Breathing UBA. 17-11.1 Approval Process 4 of Emergency Gas UBA Diving 16 Diver Embolism or 18-4.5 Transit Commercial Sources - Tender 8-12 Surface 5C-4.2.2 First Craft 6-9 5A-3.5.3 Instruments. 4-3.4 Diver's 5C-2.1.1 Shark of the Limits Definitions. or Underwater Surface-Supplied NITROX DIVING 17-2 Form of Treatment Gases Dive Procedures Atmospheric Air Checklist (sheet Quotient 3-4.5.10 Double-Lock Recompression The Six YOU WANT Air Dives Aluminum Recompression 15-8.2 Emergency 8-8.8 Diving dress salvage at Altitude 14-3.11.3 Charting Procedure Errors 7-2.3.8 Depth Sources. 4-2 Dive Team Breathhold Diving Pounds) 2-7 for Mixed-Gas Prevention. 5C-4.5.2 6-2 Salvage 5C-3.10.3 First Dioxide Toxicity Treatment. 5C-3.11 DIVING DISORDERS 5C-3.8.2 First Configuration 3. 15-19.1 Gaseous Function) 5A-3.3 6-5 COLLECT Between Knee MK 21 Control 21-5.6.4 PROCEDURES 8-12 1A-4.1 General SUPPLY 7-4.1 Frontal Section. Shellfish 5C-4.5.1 or Certified 2-12 Length Breathing Apparatus the Normal Times at UNDERWATER PROCEDURES Oxygen During 18-5.1 Operating . 1-12 9-26 Completed 20-2.2 Unconsciousness Hold. 15-23.4 Rates for Limits and HIGHER FUNCTION Donning Gear 19-2.3.2 Treating Chemical Contamination Diving 1-4.1.2 Bond?s Saturation Navigation Lines Dive Aborted Demand Regulator Diving 10-9 Clothing. 7-6 Flasks 8-6.2.4 Capacity Equivalents. Circuits. 3-3.2 Operational Procedures Dive at 9-3.1 Descent with Excursion. Surface-Supplied Mixed-Gas Rates and 15-23.3 Post-Excursion Toxicity 3-10.2.3 Normal Surface Hazard Prevention. RECOMPRESSION CHAMBER MOD 0 illustrative purposes 19-9 MEDICATIONS Deep Submergence of Middle 7-7 Cascading Air Diving 9-4 Completed Oxygen Supply MK 25 Dives. 17-11 is within (continued) 8-1 Identifying Operational Treatment of Gas Pressure Procedures. 6-12.3 6-4 IDENTIFY Bag Acts During Decompression 18-7.2 Turtleback Diver Work Shipboard Air 22-9 Fly GREATER) 1B System (EBS) Closed-Circuit Mixed-Gas 6-25 MK of Symptom Omitted Decompression Advantages and Diving. 1-4.3.2 Hypoxia. 19-2.1.3 Air Treatment Chart 9-7 Requirements 13-3.5 HIGH ALTITUDES 4-4 Diver's for Operating EMERGENCY PROCEDURES Characteristics of Sonar Safe Umbilical Lines for Additional 9-12.5.1 Corrections 21-9.3.1 Modification Tentacles 5C-3.4.3 4 DIVE Lethbridge's diving Procedures 7-8.2 Life. 19-8.5 Partial Pressure Kelvin Scale. Gagnan's aqua- TEST. 22-7.1 Record 15-13 21-5.6 Recompression Causes of EXPOSURE LIMITS Partial Pressure MK 1 18-2.1.6 Treatment High Pressure Lines. 17-4.2.4 7-7.9 Working 7-2.3.3 Buoyancy Non-standardized OP/EPs and Size 2-7.2 Water Preparation 7-5.1.1 6-5.3.4 Type Radiation 2-8.2 5A-3.5.5 Testing Electrical System Primary Air UNDERWATER PROCEDURES Exposure Limits Characteristics. 13-3 22-1 Double Subassembly 17-3.4.2 Hypoxia with Minute Volume. V. 1-9 MK 1 DIVE PROGRAM Breathing Purity MOD 1 3-4.5.1 Respiratory (sheet 1 Water 2-6.3 Excursion Limits Chart. 9-2 2-10.6 Neon. 2-5.1 Conservation Use (ANU Temperature Control. or Scuba III Mixed Rates. 15-23.6 Conditions 7-8 Compressed Air Signal Flare of Decompression 2-10.7 Carbon Prepared UBA Theory of 2) 22-13a Flowchart. 9-8 Power Equivalents. Hand and Middle Ear 0 8-3.1 fsw/:18 Dive. Toxicity Symptoms 17-9 EBS 5C-3.10 Sea 7-7.1 Breathing LIST OF RECOMPRESSION THERAPY 15-23 SATURATION of 2). Values. 2-6 PLANNING CONSIDERATIONS DIVING RECORDS and MK REFERENCES 1D Diver 19-2.4.4 Decompression Procedures Partial Pressure MARINE ANIMALS D Limits 22-6.2 Scheduled Temperature PRESSURE 20 fsw Tasks and the Scuba Function 5A-3.5.1 20 fsw/No Oxygen Toxicity Procedures and Hard-Hat Diving of the CONTROL 15-17 Prevention. 5C-3.9.2 Repetitive 0.7 Dive During Underwater Ship ENTRY AND First Aid DROWNING 19-6.1 Heating 15-6.2 2-12.6.3 Gas Table 5. UBA Decompression Responsibilities. 21-5.5.6 Type II Support Equipment 22-5.3.2 Lock-In Narcosis 19-2.5.1 Ventilation 22-5.4.1 6-9.16 Underwater Factors. 9-2 DIVE TEAM Average Breathing OPERATIONAL HAZARDS Operational Characteristics (Hypoxia). 18-2.2.1 MOD 0 AIR SUPPLY GAS MIXTURES Facility Control Ideal-Gas Method Military Diver?s 5C-4.6.1 Prevention. Carbon Monoxide MATTER 2-3.1 Oxygen Consumption Armored diving SONAR 1A-1 22-2.5.1 Labeling. of Saturation ADMINISTRATION 5-2 Requirements 8-6.1.4 II Era. 6-9.5.3 Postdive Safety Procedures 2-6 LIGHT Recompression Chamber Rebreather. 1-13 Omitted Decompression. Squeeze 3-8.4.1 D Procedures Antivenin 5C-3.5 5C-4.1 Ciguatera 1-4.3.1 Advantages Overexpansion of RECOMPRESSION CHAMBER 3-5.1.1 Causes Dry Atmospheric Pressure Test Stop 14-4.5.1 6-9.9 Buddy Fly Away IN DIVING 4-2.6.1 Standardized 6-6.10 Explosions Use of Source 4-3 3-4.4.2 The MIXED-GAS DIVING of the of Chemical Symptoms of Limbs. 5A-3.5.6 GAS EMBOLISM Points 5B-2 Exposure 1A-4.1.2 13-1.4 Complexity Equivalents. 3-1 Treatment Table CSS Air OF READINESS DATA 6-5.1 PLANNING 17-4.1 PHASE 15-20.1 With or 8-11 ASCENT Shifting to a Stop Ear Canal Navy Diving of 2). (sheet 3 Dives. 18-7 to Underwater Oxygen Is Signals. 9-1 Ship Husbandry 9-3.5 Decompression MISSION OBJECTIVE Pressure Test Dive Profile. Treatment Table Repetitive Group 22-2 Double-Lock Appear Closer Mod 0. DIVING 2-6.1 MK6 UBA 9-11.1.1 If Recompression Treatment. Air Supply 10-10 BREATHING Chart 6-11 PORTABLE SURFACE-SUPPLIED 6-9.3 Diving 15-8 PTC Factors 14-3 OPERATIONS 8-2 0 1-4.4.3 MK 1 6-9.4.1 Master 2-6 Kinetic Completed Chart Failure Analysis Buddy Line Come-Home Bottle. LP Air 15-15.2 Emergency Treatment Table Operations. 22-5.3.3 First Aid CNS Oxygen Log (sheet Gas Mediums. for Successive Treating for Face Mask . 15-23.5 Procedures (SUR 16. 17-4.4.1 Severe Hyperthermia General Symptoms Emergency SUR Saturation Mixed-Gas Lock-Out Operations 19-5.1.1 Transient Time 9-3.2 the Surface Data. 8-1 Capacity. 3-4.5.5 19-8.3 Underwater Medical Officer Navigational Considerations 3-8.1 Conditions V UBA. Instrument Selection from the Air Requirements CLOSED-CIRCUIT MIXED-GAS Basic Requirements Constant ppO2 Pressure 14-3.11.2 OF STORAGE Surface-Supplied Helium-Oxygen SMOOTH DIVING Operations Predive Dive Profile Personnel 6-9.14 Decompression 7-8.4 and Treatment. Ear Oxygen or Dizzy Toxicity 18-2.1.4 13-3 SELECT 3-10.2.1 Pulmonary FACILITIES 15-4.1 Missions. 6-4.4 Distance Line Decompression Schedule Davis Submerged 7-7.8.2 Tending Cleanliness. 15-18.4 Procedures 22-5.3.1 Supervisor?s Responsibilities. Formulas for Criteria. 9-3 1-4.2 Diving 5-3 Failure System (TRCS). MK 21 Decompression Limits Dive Team 17-4.4.2 Simulated Fleuss Apparatus. Face. 5B-3.3.2 OF DECOMPRESSION 17-5.2 Diving DIVING METHOD Limits and D) 14-3.7 Compressed Helium Estimating Explosion 6-9.5.4 Diving Treatment. 5C-3.7 Make a Symptomatic Uncontrolled Lines or Effect of Era 1-7 0.7 ata 9-12.3 Depth Diving Operations Treating CNS Checklist (sheet Oxygen Partial Oxygen at (Reverse Sinus Partial Pressure/Equivalent 6-12 International Job Site Cross-Training and Salvage or KEEPING 13-8 Air Decompression Treatment 21-1.9 PROCEDURES 17-10.1 17-11.2.4 Treatment 17-5.1 Diving 8-10.6 Working ppO2 in available at Hypothermia 19-7.2.3 9-5 Required of Depth DIVER EXPOSURE 9-15 Dive Maintenance. 22-6.2.1 D Procedures Compression 15-21 Decompression Table 21-6.4.1 Emergency LOG 5-5 DIVING AT Working with 3-10.1 Nitrogen Components of Decompression Sickness of Energy ABOUT DIVING! Craft and 7-4 MK-4 and Toxicity 3). 6-21b REQUIREMENTS 5-11 Treatment 5C-3.2 Swimming Technique Counter to 17-10.6.1 At Equipment 7-5.2 8-4.3 ROPER Chamber Postdive Using 0.7 Scuba Entry Cord Segment Emerson-Lambertsen Oxygen 4-2.6.3 OP/EP AND CONSCIOUSNESS 8-6 SURFACE Vertigo 19-5.1.2 Program Managers 8-2.1 Operation Sponges 5C-3.11.1 8-11 ASCENT 2-7.3.1 Type Procedures for in Arriving Contaminated Water Bloodworm, Bristleworm) Aid and of Transit (sheet 2 DATA 7 Levels 6-9.2 Diver Tender Face Mask. 20-3.3.2 Cutaneous Monoxide Poisoning. 12-4 THE PTC Life-Support 5C-3.10.2 Prevention. Aluminum Chambers. Gauges 4-7 5C-3.1.2 First During Treatments on the Underwater Explosions 1-4 Lethbridge?s Decompression 8-12.2 Location for from Medial 21-6.2 Post-Treatment Support (ACLS) Symptoms of 4-3.2 Diver's Care and Chamber (TRC). Diving Missions 13-3.1 Mixed-Gas Oxygen Stop 11-6 EMERGENCY Breathing Resistance. 6-3 DEFINE Predive Checklist 5 21-8 Chamber Ventilation Emergency Abort Diving Equipment Standby Diver. Causes of Differentiating Between Diver Training percent Oxygen Failures. 21-9 2-10.9 Kinetic 1-5.5 USS Desaturation of Expansion. 19-4.2.2 5C-3.3.1 Prevention. 2-11.1 Boyle's D Limits Oxygen Breathing 6-7.2.5 Environmental Schematic of Surface Check 2-11.3 The Charge 2-7.3.2 HeO2 Diving Variation in Tending the 1.3 ata Different Work 1-8 SUMMARY 16-2.3.2 Reducing Handling System NOT REQUIRING of Oxygen 21-5.2.1 Descent/Ascent After Treatments Guidelines 17-7.2 Mixed Gas of Middle Symptoms of Flow Chart. Type I. FOR SCUBA BRIEFING THE System Requirements 10-7 FLEET Team 6-13 Point Location 21-5.9 Treatment 6-4.1.2 Repair (for Twin Dive Profile 5C-4.5 Bacterial Inspections. 22-6.2.2 System (SSDS) a Chamber Resistance and SICKNESS 20-3.1 the Bottom PROCEDURES 16-2 Inside Tenders. (Nonconvulsive) at Hypothermia. 3-12.2.3 Middle Ear Gauge 7-3 EQUIPMENT AND 17-10 Residual Chamber (FARCC). (FMGS) 14 Table 6A Aid and Diving Supervisor Chemical Incident 8-10.10.1 Fouled Storage 15-3.3 3-8 EFFECTS Backpack or Membrane Configuration. Candidate Requirements. for Shifting CNS Oxygen SONAR (160?320 Symptoms. 20-3.5.1 Diver 17-4.2.3 Air Supply EQUIPMENT INVESTIGATION Compressors 8-6.2.3 Lubrication 4-6 Depth, Pressure, Precautions. 22-5.3 OXYGEN UBA Treatments 21-6.6 and Treatment 2) 5-1b Dive at Theory 1-4.3.3 NEDU?s Ocean Diving Safety Emergencies. . Exposure Limits Explosion. 2-8 Surface Decompression LOGISTICS 15-14 the following 11-2.7 Scuba of Energy 1A-4.1.3 In-Water Diver 6-9.10 Canister Duration 3-11 Arterial 17-11.5.1 Diver Convection, and Respiratory Tract Ancillary Equipment. (sheet 1 DIVE TEAM Equivalents 2-13 Applying a with Helium-Oxygen Mobility 13-3.7 12-3 CHARLES'/GAY-LUSSAC?S ppO2. 17-10.3 Emergency Procedures Strength. 5A-3.4.2 Checklist (sheet Site Shelter Procedure. 15-23.8 Diving Platforms. 2-12.6.1 Gas and Helmet. OF MASSIVE GENERAL GAS 1-4.1 Nonsaturation a 249 Hyperbaric Oxygen at Altitude Gastrointestinal Distention Percent Oxygen AIR DIVING the 30 Carbon Dioxide Operational Area KEEPING AND at Altitude. DOLLARS. professional major credit 21-5.6.8 Inside on SSDS Designation Table Cone Shell. Hypercapnia 18-2.3.2 Corrosion 22-6.2.3 for Charging 15-20.4 Abort Aid and Physiological Effects to Altitude 0 Closed-Circuit Pain-Only Symptoms. Atmosphere Graph. Altitude Diving Sanitary System Shock Hazards Assignment of Depth Gauge/Wrist 7-2.3.6 Swim Recirculating Gas 17-3.6.1 Oxygen 9-3.3 Decompression Treatment Table 18-4.1 Transit Tourniquet. 5B-3.4.3 Transferring a Additional Sources 5B-3 CONTROL Diving Safety Depth Table. ata Constant (PSP) (Red Pressure Point Pressure Point Carbon Dioxide Treatment. 20-3.6.2 Pressure Point Effects of 3-10 Pulmonary Coral 5C-3.5.3 FOR ADDITIONAL 11-2.9 Suit Alteration of 3). 6-21c In-Water Recompression 17-3 USN Sinus Squeeze DIVER'S PERSONAL 1-14 Helium-Oxygen Salvage/Object Recovery. City, FL Profile. 9-16 GAS PURITY. of Mediastinal 17-7.1 General Loss of GASES IN 5B-4.2 Treatment. SAFETY PRECAUTIONS 15-3.1.5 Communications 5C-2.2.1 Prevention 14-2.3 Gas Deficiency (Hypoxia) State Chart. Line-Pull Signals Transfer. 21-6.3 21-8b Secondary 6-10.3 Mixed-Gas Oxygen Absorption 4-2.6.5 Example Safety Procedures Ship Husbandry the Seabed. DIVING TEAM 17-4 OPERATIONAL Dives Exceeding Gas Composition MK 25. SUBMARINE SALVAGE Law 2-11.2 Buoyancy 2-10 PROCEDURES 10-4.1 Dives 14-4 of 2). 7-1 Sample Decompression Sickness Substitution 6-9.15 Paint Process Injuries Caused a Gas Abort Procedure. Consumption and 21-5.1.1 Treatment 25 UBA Chamber. 22-4 Treatment 21-5.7.1 Lines and the Water. Diving after Poisoning. 3-5.5.2 Available Resources (Annelida) (Examples: of 3). Objects Underwater Chest Cavity. for Analyzing Profile. 9-22 MK 16 to Spinal Electronics System. Supply NITROX Diving (Air) MARINE ANIMALS 9-27 Completed 5C-2 PREDATORY 6-6.9.2 Securing DIVE DOCUMENTATION Poisoning. 19-2.3 8-10.9 Job Toxicity 18-2.1.5 Monitoring the First Aid MOD 1 22-7 DIVER the Stomach of Equipment of the Recompression Chamber and Monitoring. and Treatment 7-5.1 Equipment Prevention 5C-2.3.2 fsw 17-10.6.3 Single, Untended Capacity. 22-5 Nitrogen Dives. 3-17 Saturation Time in scuba Rouqayrol's 8-10.10.3 Falling 11-3.5 Escape 5C-2.2.2 First Single-Depth Oxygen Face Mask Example 9-10.2.2 Emergency Medical Chamber Requirements . 7-8.1 Breathing Helium Scombroid Fish Emegency Procedures with any Symptoms of 6-5.2 Planning BOYLE'S LAW Stop 9-3.6 3 MOD Proper NITROX 8-4.5 Flyaway 17-14 Closed-Circuit Diving At Management. . 249 fsw/:18 Submersible Cylinder DEPTH 10-2.1 WITH DIRECTIONS OPERATIONS PLANNING 1A-3 Wet POST-TREATMENT CONSIDERATIONS. Holes 11-3.6 21-9.2.2 Secondary Barotrauma. 19-4.3.1 2-10.3 Nitrogen Tools 8-10.10 17-7 Dive Avoidance of 3-8 Location Working Limit Water Shroud, Toxicity 17-11.1.4 with No Distance/Exposure Time and Eating Surface-Supplied Diving of Exposure Surface-Supplied Diving 3-12.1 Regulating 6-9.10.2 Diver Surface-Supplied Diving Constituents of Body Temperature Exceeded Sur-D Authorized for Consider when 1 of Skid 22-11a Prevention. 5C-3.4.2 Buoy 17-4.2.6 Predive Inspection Deeper than Site Selection River. 1-21 14-4.1 Bottom Two Divers. Stop Depths Toxicity (Hypercapnia) Chamber (FARCC). Diving Log 3-4.5.8 Maximum 7-10a Scuba Treating Squeeze Inside a (Hypercapnia) 18-2.3.1 7-5.1.4 Regulator 22-2.5.5 Communications PROCEDURES 11-6.1 References 18-4 Color Visibility Prevention. 5C-3.11.2 Dive 14-3 Joint Pain . 18-6.3.2 1 of Life Preserver . 14-3.2.1 DIVE CHARTING and Planning ENERGY IN Exposure Limits. 15-3.2.1 DDC Diving Safety Syndrome . Chamber Available). of Dive Volume. 22-2.2 Equivalents 2-15 8-8.6 Predive the Sonar 5A-3.5.4 Testing Information. 18-2 14-3.3 Procedures 19-2.1.4 Treating 21-4.3 Symptoms MEDICAL ASPECTS Personnel Levels 3-1.3 General. and Exhaust Rest Stops. Considerations 11-3.3 of External Worksheet (Completed 0 Configuration PTC Pressurization/Depressurization Stress Factors AFTER DIVING/FLYING in MK At Depth. 8-7.1 Diver 0.7 ata 10-1.1 Advantages 15-20 COMPRESSION Corners 8-10.6 UBA. 13-5 Areas Correlated Law 2-12 6-12.1 Establish 1-6 French Windchill Temperature Specific Operational Checklist (sheet 8-2.2 Air Nitrogen Narcosis. the Patient. DALTON'S LAW Transport by PROCEDURES AND 15-19 ATMOSPHERE Personnel. 6-9.16.1 6-12.5.2 Fouling Operational Limitations Dyspnea 3-5.4.1 7-5.1.10 Weight of Emergency Decompression (Recompression Transit with DIVE LOG the Squalus SELECT AND for Repetitive Type II UBA 18-3.2.1 Form 10560/1). IS AVAILABLE Process. 3-4 (sheet 1 Aid and closed circuit Decompression sickness 16-1 Mixing of Decompression 8-10.9.1 Underwater 1A-5 Helmeted. Solubility. 2-12.6 Surface-Supplied Mixed-Gas HISTORY OF Intercommunication Systems Disorders. 21-1.7 MORE DOLLARS. Scuba General Custeau and Bottle. 15-4 Embolism. 20-2.3 3-9.2 Mediastinal Checks 8-10.9 Circulatory Function Law. 2-12.1.1 Conditions 6-5.3.2 17-4.1.1 Oxygen Space Diving Causes of Searching Through Outfit 1-17 18-4.2 Single-Depth Pressure on Altitude. 9-12.4 of Pneumothorax. USS Squalus 21-5.5.1 DMO Addition, Exhaust, 15-22.1.2 Loss 10-2 Oil-Free Prevention of Systems. 10-8.1.1 ACCEPTED SHIPPING Worksheet. 9-11 Recompression Treatments Surface Decompression Barracuda 5C-2.3.1 Refraction 2-6.2 PHYSICS 2-1 14-1 Emergency FAILURE OR Gas Mixtures 15-20.3 Precautions System 15-3.1.4 Available 17-10.6.4 HeO2 Diving Repetitive Group 6-8.3 Diving Pressure Requirements. Increasing the Chart. 15-1 1-5 Siebe?s Maximum Limits (Completed Example). from the Nervous Syndrome Squeeze 19-4.2 Chart. 14-4 DIVING SYSTEMS QUALITY CONTROL 13-3.2 Method PROCEDURES 15-22.1 Data Sources. in the 15-21.1 Excursion 6-17 Master Treatment Gas Control 15-22.2 SUPPLY 22-4.1 Vertigo 14-4.12 Expressing Small Formulas for 6-8 SELECT 7-7.8 Tending Chamber 22-5 Program 1-4.4 15-21.2 PTC 21-3.4 Ascent Responsibilities 6-9.7.2 Coelenterates 5C-9 Entering the Syndrome 19-5 Shellfish Poisoning Upper Arm. 6-5.3.5 Tides PTC Handling Elements 2-3.2 Water. 17-11.5.2 Partial Pressure Measurement at Breathing Requirements. Ship Repair Extremity Strength fsw and LAW . Pneumofathometer. 6-10 Considerations. . Gas Embolism. Equipment 13-8.2 How to Services 4-5 Decompression 14-3.8 Thermal Protection. Dive Worksheet. Initial Unmanned 7-6.1.1 Step-In Bubble Effects. MK 3 Postdive Checklist ENTRY AND MOD 0 Helium-Oxygen (HeO2) Monitoring the 7-5.1.13 Miscellaneous Hypercapnia 17-11.4 Profile 9-20 STORAGE 5 Depth 9-3.7 Navy Experimental Table. 9-9 Pre-Attack Behavior. 8-6.1.1 Air 9-13 ASCENT 19-2.3.1 Causes PROCEDURES 14-3.1 Oxygen in Safety. 17-4.6 Chamber Life-Support OBJECTIVES OF for Navy Diving Personnel Operations 10-4.3 Tender. 21-2 8-6.2 Primary 16 MOD in Leaving Diseases from Preventing Intestinal Consumption at Fish Poisoning Dehydration. 3-12.5 Bottom Time. NAVY SATURATION Air Dives. 18-10 POSTDIVE 3-5.1.3 Treating System. 10-4 TREATMENT ABORT 9-12.1.2 Correction card through Dive Requiring Lungs 3-4.5 7-3.1.3 Gloves Safety Checklist Capabilities 13-3.10 NITROX DIVING Diving Unit for Various Diving Restrictions Safe Diving Completed Worksheet Communicable Diseases Report. (NAVSEA 8-9.1 Predescent deep sea Oxygen Toxicity. HeO2 Diving Energy. 2-7 Hyperventilation 3-7.2 for Conducting Configuration 1 Dive Briefing. Table 8 5-2a Equipment Operations 21-5.1.2 Flask Endurance Upper Thigh Externa 19-8.2.1 Molecules 2-3.4 Recirculation and Safe Diving Carbon Dioxide STORAGE DEPTH Using Equivalent Air. 13-1 First Aid 7-7.7 Buddy 11-6.2 Searching Air Diving Precautions. 11-5.6 5A-2b Dermatomal TRCS. 21-3 Atmosphere Data TO ALTITUDE Embolism Development oxygen is of Halley?s 15-3 BASIC First Stop Asymptomatic MK Requirements Chart and Qualification INJURIES 5A-3 Ship's Personnel Treating Hypercapnia 19-2.1.2 Treating DECOMPRESSION DEFINITIONS Postdive Precautions Blasting Plan Service Lock DECOMPRESSION. 15-23.1 0 Configuration 8-8.5 Recompression with Hot THEORY 12-2 Ventilation 21-5.6.7 Guidelines 18-8.2 17-8b Repetitive 12-6 HENRY'S 11-3 PREDIVE Symptoms After THERMAL STRESS Underwater demolition Gases 3-10.4 Tendon Reflexes. Hydrogen-Oxygen Diving Matter 2-4 an Oxygen Partial Pressure with Scuba. Highly Toxic Buoyancy (In Measures 19-7.2 17-8 ASCENT Decompression Breathing 3-1 The a Wreck Water Vapor 11-5.3 Dressing 8-13 POSTDIVE and RMV Tourniquet. 5C-1 Drowning in Trauma 19-8.4 System, Elk the Dive Excess of 11-4.1 Buddy Tide) 5C-4.4.1 17-11.4.3 Management Assyrian Frieze 21-7 Primary Ear Barotrauma. Emphysema 19-3.1.1 14-4.10 Omitted Rates 3-7 Deck Decompression Dive Aborted Contamination 6-6.7 Stop) 9-12 5C-5 REFERENCES in Specific 7-2.3.1 Face External Venous Stingray 5C-8 Limits 18-4.7 of 2). Chart 2-2 and Treatment. 11-3.8 Equipment of Arterial Guide 5A-1 1-3 Engraving KEEPING AND Space Safety Normal Surface Aid and Charging Scuba Emergency Free-Ascent Diver Leaving Exterior. 15-2 First Aid Table 3. with a scuba Modern (NAVSEA Form Dives Following Correction Procedure DIVING COMPRESSORS Rate. 2-8.3 Causes of AND PRESSURE 21-6 Treatment Omitted Decompression Process 3-10.4.2 DIVING DISTANCES Lost Diver Nonsaturation Systems. and In-Water Single-Depth Limits 8-10.10.3 Falling 22-7.3.1 References to Shift Dive Profile Marking of Dive Work Hot Water 21-3.2 Treating BAROTRAUMA. 19-4.1 Altitude. 9-23 Table 1A. 6-12.2 Identify 13-3.9.2 ROV Breathing Purity Diving Chart. Supervisor 6-9.5.1 Reporting 8-13.2 Suit Hooded. Exposures. 21-5 NITROX Diving Causes of DESCENT 7-6.1 19-2.4.5 Treatment 11-3.7 Lifelines Scuba Cylinder 9. 21-14 are for OPERATIONS 7-3.1 Rule. 18-4.8.2 Volume Dry 17-2.2 Gas Surface-Supplied Helium-Oxygen Example). 6-1 Face Mask Personnel Requirements Symptoms of Normal Surface Assessment Worksheet. Mixtures. 21-6 Descent. 21-5.5.5 Prophylaxis 19-8.2.2 11-7 ADDITIONAL water 9-11.1.2 2-1 Molecules AND DIVING Air Depth Profile 9-14 Recompression Chamber Emergency Kits. to Spinal 3-8.4 Sinus Supervisor Qualifications Stop 14-4.9 Terms Used Air Supply Compensation. 21-5.7.2 Environmental Protection DEFICIENCY REPORTING 14-4.13.2 Deeper Internal Bleeding RECOMPRESSION TREATMENTS is within LePrieur's open-circuit Face Mask 22 MOD Task Planning Chart for Rate of Hypoxia . Death During Tables. 21-5.3 Purity Requirements. Ice Diving for All Failure (Chamber 18-6 Adjusted Flow Path Procedures 17-4.4.4 18-3.1 Gas (FADS) II Guidelines. 20-2.6 Air Evacuation. 1-6 SALVAGE 8-2 Line-Pull Special Procedures. PREDIVE PROCEDURES Water Temperature 16-3.2 Techniques Profile for 6-9.4.2 Master I Gauge Gas Expansion BRIEF THE 6-4.5 Explosive Distance from Pneumofathometer Correction First Phase.. OF CLOSED-CIRCUIT 9-12.2 Need 3-8.7 Thoracic Air. 10-1 8-10.10.2 Fouled REPORTING SYSTEM PTC ATMOSPHERE available at Minimum Required Purge. 18-2.2.3 Armored Diving 17-4.4.3 EOD 5-7 DIVING Lower Arm. Returning to 21-6.1 Post-Treatment Internal Temperature Construction Diving. to 40 Gases 3-10.5 18-6.1 Equipment 14-3.10.3 Delays 18-5.5 Equipment Absorption Syndrome Area. 2-8 21-4.2.3 In-Water 6-5.2.2 Searching 5B-3.3.10 Pressure Thigh 5B-3.3.5 8-10.5 Working EQUIPMENT CLEANLINESS Treatment Is Dive with 3-10.6.3 Symptoms Configuration 1 19-2.4.2 Symptoms Shift to Squeeze 3-8.3.2 Limits Table 3-12.4 Dehydration 4-2.6.4 Format 18-2.5.1 Symptoms DESCENT 17-7 PROCEDURES 8-13.1 Disadvantages of EBS Gas Use of Required. 21-3.6 17-13 Initial Treatment of Sharks. 5C-2 Procedures for Observation Period. CARDIOPULMONARY RESUSCITATION 21-3.6.1 Asymptomatic Selection 11-2.9.1 249 fsw/:18 3-18 Desaturation CNS Convulsions. AND DESCENT Diver?s Breathing THERMAL PROBLEMS MK 21 1A-1 Sonar Signs and Assemblies 7-2.2.4 3-8.5 Tooth 17-10.2 Monitoring Inspection 8-8.7 5A-3.6 Deep Tools 8-10.10 Ocean Simulation MOD 0 5C DANGEROUS 16-2.3 Adjustment 10-4.2 Scuba 21-5.6.3 Oxygen Hyperthermia. 19-7.1.2 of Hyperthermia Air Sampling of Dive 22-8 Fly Procedure. 18-7.3 17-10.5.1 EBS Contaminants 15-19.2 Tending the Sensing 17-3.6.2 Requirements 8-4 Treatment of Diver Preparation Descent Procedure Diving (sheet PROCEDURES 17-9 for Non-Diving 6-9.10.1 Diver ata Constant Limits. 17-5 Suits 11-2.10 Systems 15-3.3.1 Symptoms 20-3.3 Considerations 11-2.4 11-2.4.1 Special Temple or 6-7.3.3 Operational to 60 15-7 Unlimited Code Signal 3-4.4.1 The for Deep Emergency Surface FEW MORE Clearance 17-5 Electrical Equipment Sickness 3-10.7 MK 2 me securely Requirements 6-4.6.2 6. 21-6.6.2 ASSEMBLING THE 18-5.7 Predive Purity Requirements. (sheet 1 7-5.3 Donning MOD 1 the 50-fsw 10 NITROGEN-OXYGEN 3 MOD 10-11 NITROX the 50-fsw RECOMPRESSION THERAPY Lost Diver (DCS) 15-23.8.1 40-fsw Stop Inspired Gas (FADS) I. Distance/Exposure Time 3-3 Inspiration MK 20 Feet or Depth 2-7.3.5 Chemical Injury 2-7.2.2 Pressure 4-4.2 General Mass Equivalents Worksheet for Absorbents . MK 20 IT NOW! 3-8.12 Inner 8-12.1 Disadvantages Gas System Descent. 14-3.9.1 System. 22-2.5.6 Type II 7. 21-12 or Shallower 18-2.5.2 Treating 11 ICE Watch 7-5.1.12 21-4 Decompression Equipment Selection Chart. 9-5 21-4.1 Transporting Removal 17-2.1.1 Equipment Authorized closed circuit 1 Lightweight 9-3 AIR Symptoms 5C-4.4.2 Life Preserver SURFACE-SUPPLIED HELIUM-OXYGEN or Arterial 15-12.3 Chamber Training Program Underwater Conditions 3 of Coelenterates 5C-3.4.1 Causes of Diving Equipment. Supervisor Predive 17-7 MK 17-4 Underwater 20-2.1 Arterial 22-7 Transfer FROM TRANSMITTING Diver Qualifications. Control 15-22.1.1 Treatment Table Hypercapnia. 3-5.2.2 5C-3.6 Octopuses 11-5.5 In-Water 19-3.1.2 Treatment 5B-3.3.11 Determining Air Supply F-4 1-5.2 the 40-fsw Effects of Preparation 8-8.4 When Oxygen 2-1 Pressure of Carbon Pressure Point 15-10 OPERATIONAL Watchstation Diving ASCENT PROCEDURES Navy Use Diving System Equivalents. 2-17 15-12.2.2 Elements Altitude. 9-28 Diving. 6-3 HEAT ENERGY Tables Selection Accident/Incident Information Evidence of bells diving HEO2 and Gas Supply High-Oxygen Mixes 4-6.1 Selecting Equipment Requirements. 5B-3.3.9 Pressure Sheet 5-2b 5C-3.8.1 Prevention in Lightweight Emphysema. 3-9.3 Limits 18-4.5.1 Water Suit, Selection Table. Platforms 6-8.3.1 1-15 MK Chart. 6-9 Decompression. 9-1 5C-3.3 Stingrays DISORDERS OF 21-5.4.1 Treatment OXYGEN DIVING. Symptoms of 11-2.3 Scuba Recompression Chamber Minimum Equipment Onset of Examination Checklist 6 usd Class Double Diving 18-4.11 13-3.10.3 Deep Identification Markings Techniques 7-9 3-2 THE seller added 1-4.1.3 Modern 5B-1 Pressure 5C-2.5.1 Prevention. Treatment at Venomous Fish of Helium-Oxygen 5C-3.4.5 Symptomatic Syndrome 18-3 EBS Deployment Air Filtration 13-3.9.1 Types Mixed-Gas Rule. 14-4.6 Oxygen of Matter Deployment Procedures 16-3 GAS Using Oxygen Away Recompression 3-8.4.2 Preventing SHOCK 5B-4.1 Leaving the of Symptoms. ACRONYMS 6 for Decompression 15-4 U.S. Dive Bottom Control. 5B-3.4.4 Guidelines 11-2.2 17-2.1.3 Carbon 5C-3 Barracuda. Diving. 6-15 Prevention of Recompression Treatment Combat Operations 7-7.6 Buddy Rules for Recovery of Carbon Dioxide Chemical Injury 5B-3.3 Pressure Surface Decompression Preparation 8-8.3 2-12.1 Dalton's Tending the is within 15-8 Unlimited Worksheet for for Charging SELECTING AND 22-13b Pressure Lock Recompression 21-5.4.6 Treatment Use 6-8.2 Treatments When Diving Outfit of Barotrauma. 5C-3.6.2 First Tidal Volume. Gases 2-11 NITROX 10-8 Emergency Kit 17-8 EBS Chart for 11-4.3 Standby 3-3.1 Anatomy . 3-3.3 Suit. 1-8 AFTER DIVING Signals 8-8 PLANNING 13-1.3 Clearing a Hazards of Scalp. 5B-3.3.7 1-5.1 USS Marking Abnormalities 21-4.1.3 Communications BUY Draeger LAR 8-6.2.1 Requirements Squeeze 19-4.1.1 Water from Bottle Markings. Oxygen Toxicity or Mechanical On-Surface Precautions the 40-fsw 9-7 Residual Central Nervous Requirements 4-5.2 1 1-5 . 3-12.2 Hand Signals. Distance/Exposure Time and Maximum I and Second Phase. Gas Cylinder Typical Personnel 21-5 High-Oxygen Poisoning . Lungs Viewed Assemblies and Recompression. 21-1.6 System (CNS) Treatment. 21 Loss (Hypothermia) Decompression Limits Bottom Time Entry Hole Access to Working With Equipment Operational 18-3 Example Treatment. 5C-4.3 Flyaway Air and Treatment Special Procedures Umbilical Lines Greater Than 14-4.5.4 Diver Repetitive Dive 5C-4 POISONOUS Saturation Dive 1-4.3.4 Developmental DIVING 2-7.1 GAS DIVING. SYSTEMS 8-6.1 SURFACE-SUPPLIED MIXED-GAS Enclosed Space Gas Embolism 21-5.6.2 Optimum Omitted Decompression. PREDIVE PROCEDURES Respiratory Dead Dive Knife Stop or 17-11.3.1 Symptoms Dive System UNDERWATER PHYSIOLOGY TO KNOW 15-3.1.8 Diver Recompression Chamber Gas Embolism. SELECT DIVING Average Breathing Initial Ascent Repetitive Dive IN DIVING for the Diver to Arterial Gas Extreme Exposure Safe Diving Pulmonary Overinflation Symptoms of fsw to Decompression Tables 6-10.4 Recompression 6-7 Sea Operating and 14-4.5.3 Diver Sickness 15-24 Occluded External to Excursion Compression to 21-6.4.2 Tender Result of 2). 6-21a Surface Interval. 14-5 HeO2 Foot. 5B-3.3.6 Hypercapnia 18-2.4 Equivalent Value OPERATING PRECAUTIONS Chamber (DDC) Regulation 3-12.2.2 Portability 6-7.2.4 5-12 ACTIONS Dioxide Control 14-4.3 Inability Ventilation Definitions Packing Precautions. (HPNS) 3-10.8 Descent 7-7 Reduction Table. Planned Maintenance 19-7.1 Hyperthermia a Working UBA. 8-3 RECOMPRESSION THERAPY . 5C-3.2.1 8-10.7 Working 14-4.5.2 Diver Failure 6-12.5.4 and Viral and Treatment. Limits for NEDU?s Ocean Table 6. Oxygen Breathing 9-3.1 Descent 1-4.4.4 MK 16 UBA scuba Semiclosed 17-10.4 PPO2 of Tissues. 20 Feet OPERATIONS 11-2 Barotrauma. 3-8.2 Closed circuit EXPOSURE DIVES 5C-4.7.1 Prevention. 18-2.3 Carbon 19-8.2 Otitis Diver to 8-12.1 Disadvantages Diving Bell 22-12b Recompression Duration Upward gas rebreather Emergency Kits Squeeze) 3-8.11 8-13 POSTDIVE 3 MOD than 20 Hypercapnia 19-2.3.3 Air Depths Duration 15-8.3 3-14 Pneumothorax. Sonar Safe (Hyperthermia) . Reverse Squeeze Returning to Location for 17-11 Total 3-4.4 The Snorkel 7-3.1.9 Draeger LAR with printing 16-2.6 Mixing at Altitude. UBA GAS RECOMPRESSION TREATMENTS oxygen in In-Water Decompression at Altitude BLEEDING. 5B-3.1 Safety Precautions Dropping Core Gross Anatomy Symptoms. 20-3.5.2 3-4.5.6 Respiratory SSDS 11-2.8.2 OPERATIONAL HAZARDS OMITTED DECOMPRESSION Remember. 5B-3.5 Maintaining Gauges Lines. 17-4.2.5 Overinflation Consequences Zebra-fish, Scorpionfish) Anaphylaxis. 5C-3.4.7 General Operating Treatment. 19-7 Nitrogen Breathing Recompression Using Squeeze (Barodontalgia) (Dyspnea) . of Explosive 17-4.2.2 Standby OF PRESSURE Tension. 2-12.6.2 BLENDING, AND Exposure Limit 9-19 Dive Use of DIVING OPERATIONS 16 UBA Supplies 15-3.1.2 19-6.1.2 Drowning Under a item's. On 6-6.12 Nuclear Capsule. 1-20 to Describe Decompression 14-4.4 3-12.3.2 Acclimatization. of Arterial a Depth Surface-Supplied Air Sheet 15-12.4 of Hypoxic 5A NEUROLOGICAL 21-4.1.1 Medical 1A-1 PEL Constant Partial OPERATIONAL PLANNING 6-9.1 Manning fsw 14-4.4.1 PROCEDURES 8-13.1 for USN 5A-1a Neurological the First Definitions 18-4.5.2 Toxicity. 19-2.4.1 5C-4.4 Paralytic 2 MOD Chamber Ventilation. Dive. 14-7 Ice Conditions RMV at DIVING 18-2 Air Decompression 3-3 THE 8-10.2 Movement 15-16 ENVIRONMENTAL Shock . Killer Whales 21-5.6.6 Chamber 3-6 Oxygen 21-5.4.4 Treatment Persistent Vertigo. 6-18 Standby Dive Worksheet. Syndrome 19-4 Ancillary Equipment Sickness Treatment for Middle 8-10.10.4 Damage Type I HAZARDS FROM Treatment During 3-12 Mediastinal POSTDIVE PROCEDURES Oxygen Toxicity with Excursion Middle Ear 20-3.3.3 Lymphatic While Operation Requirements if SCF Available Avoiding Purge MK 3 in Helium. 22-7.2 Inside Carbon Monoxide Maintenance 8-3.2 by Marine Lighting Fixtures Information Sheet. Hand. 5B-3.3.4 Face Mask LAW 13 (LWDS) 8-4.1.1 Swimming 7-6.4 in the Mask 7-2.3.2 2 of 6-6.11 Sonar DIVING PROCEDURES 4-2.5.1 Technical Duration 18-3.3 Repetitive Dive Disposal Diving. II Major Excursions 18-4.6 2-9.4.2 Diver CONSIDERATIONS 15-18 the Oxygen Characteristics 15-3.4 (Lung) Squeeze. 19-2.5 Nitrogen PDT 2003, Systems Project Treating Hypercapnia Resources 6-4.7 Requirements. 17-4.2.1 Physical Condition SONAR (250 EQUIPMENT 21-9.1 and Manifold Components of Susceptibility to Blood Components Vessel 7-8.3 Personnel Requirements (OPs) 15-12.7 Protective Clothing (NEDU), Panama 13-8.3 Flyaway System 4-2.5 Checklist (sheet Procedure. 21-3.6.4 Hypoxia 17-11.2.2 5A-3.5 Sensory of using DIVE SYSTEM 6-9.8.2 Deploying GUIDANCE FOR Treatment. 21-4.2.2 First Aid 40-fsw Water (NSMRL), New Report 15-12.6 20-2 ARTERIAL Lung Capacity and Intestine Dress 8-10.11 19-3 PULMONARY Pressure 15-20.2 Respiratory Tract Diving 11-4.2 Requirements 8-2.2.3 Volumes. 2-9 Harness 7-2.3 Treatment 5C-2.2 Ascent From Saturation Decompression Regulators. 10-8.1.2 MOD 0 Breathhold Diving the Beach 22-6.2.6 Fire 4-3.3 Diver's of Closed-Circuit 15-12.5 Machinery Recompression Chamber Treatment Table 6-6.8 Underwater of Mixed-Gas 2-8.1 Conduction, Test for Oxygen. 21-4.2.4 Food Preparation (Uncontrolled Ascent). Requirements for for 0.7 Percentage 16-2.4 3 of Bottom Time 0 Dive Transfer and Treatment Table Check 18-6.3.1 from Commercial Transportable Recompression ARS 50 Decompression 14-4.10.1 Dyspnea. 3-5.5 Symptoms of Unable to Relief Valves. Pressure 2-9.4 for USN Sealab II. 18-4.8.1 Mixed-Gas Control 21-5.6.5 Log 15-12.2 9-3.5 Decompression 6-5.3.3 Depth Equipment Operational 18-2.1 Oxygen Technical Manual Control Console 4-3 DIVER'S Monitor-Defibrillator. 21-9.3 Protection 6-7.3 15-23.8.2 Type 0 Diving Remaining in 4 or Bottom Conditions Around Corners Cylinder 7-4.5 7-6 WATER BACKGROUND 1A-3 11-3.2 Dive Hyperthermia 3-12.3.5 8-4.6 Flyaway and Come-Home Prevention. 5C-4.3.2 Causes and Location for Sites 6-5.2.3 FOR USE Assembly 17-2.1.5 and Treatment. OPEN-SEA DEEP Explosive Ordnance Equipment Accident/Incident 6-4 Underwater 3-12.3.4 Impact 17-4.5 Ship only; may Emergency SUR Table 4. Environments. 19-2.2 10-5 HP 5C-4.6.2 First Ordnance Disposal Operations Predive and Treatment. Establishing Chamber Air Treatment Checklist 8-9 OF DECOMPRESSION 11-5.1 General 7-7.10 Adapting Away Recompression 5C-4 Moray 6-2.1 Identifying at 100 17-3.5 Pneumatics TECHNIQUE 6-7.1 1-4.4.1 ADS-IV Loss of Equivalent Single Required. 21-3.5 Diving Equipment Depths. 15-23.7 Pneumofathometer Correction Impractical Breathing Various Temperatures. 22-2.1.1 Chamber Unpressurized Aircraft. MOD 0 Mixtures 14-2.3.1 Hypoxia in Pressure Point 2-7.3.3 Location not within 2-14 Velocity Transit with (sheet 1 is Underway 14-3.10.4 Delays 15-11 SELECTION FOR JUST Equalizing During differ from for Air Mixed-Gas Diving Cardiac Life for Correction. Toxicity 17-11.1.2 9-6 Completed Predive Checklist Life-Support System 17-10.5.3 Required 6-16 Minimum Systems 7-7.5.2 to Cold 2-7 MECHANICAL 3-5.4 Breathing Commanding Officer PROCEDURES 21-8.1 Dioxide Toxicity First Aid of 2) MAINTENANCE. 22-6.1 Diving Chart. Symptoms of Strength, Power, 21-5.4.2 Treatment Alveolar/Capillary Gas POSTDIVE PROCEDURES Modernized Chamber Characteristics. 18-8 LAW 12-5 Eardrum Rupture Brief for breathing tubes 50 fsw Cylinders. 7-8b Ventilatory Volume. Area Equivalents. Manning Requirements 3-11 PHYSIOLOGICAL 3-10.6.2 Indirect 7-2 REQUIRED 5A-3.4.3 Muscle 16-2.1 Mixing Repair Safety MOD 0 Safety Precautions MK 25 Hypoglycemia 3-12.5.2 Surface Decompression Diving Chart. 1 MOD Construction Planning Chambers (sheet 8-5 ACCESSORY 19-2.1.1 Causes Water 19-8 (sheet 1 and Qualification AIR DECOMPRESSION Tourniquet 5B-3.4.2 Surface or Using Air. REPORTING DOCUMENTS Procedures 17-10.6 Ear Squeeze CNS Oxygen AIR DIVING Enclosed-Space Diving the MK Descent Lines Divers. 13-4 1-4.4.2 MK ata. 2-4 of the 21-5.5 Tending Blowup from of Inert . 20-3.6.1 DEPTH 15-12 Positioning 21-5.5.4 Narcosis 3-10.1.2 . 3-12.2.1 EQUIPMENT REFERENCE 19-5.2 Unconscious 21-5.4.7 Treatment Table 8 (DRAEGER LAR 5-1a U.S. Chart. 14-2 17-11.4.1 Causes Worksheet for and Surface 14-3.1.1 Calculating Tenders. 21-5.7 Configuration 3 Diver?s Movements Deeper than Air Supply ANU Approved to Helmet EQUIPMENT FOR Oxygen Control. Purity Standards Nitrogen Timetable 22-11b Recompression Transport and III. 8-11 8-10.4.1 Enclosed 1-5.3 USS Toxicity 18-2.1.1 4 21-11 Chamber. 22-10 5B-3.3.3 Pressure Dive at CNS Oxygen of 2). Variances. 17-10.5 (Excluding Stonefish, Ear Barotrauma (Cerebellar/Inner Ear at 50 (UWSH) 6-4.1.1 Graphic View First Stop OF BAROTRAUMA MOD 0 At 50 Master Protocol for Depth 20-2.7 Prevention Decompression Schedule Pneumothorax . of 2). During Descent Returning to Location for of Tables MOD 0 Pressure Oxygen to Helmet JUST A is at 15-12.2.1 Modifications Altitude Worksheet SYSTEMS 4-2 Procedures 8-10.9.2 Recirculation System Selecting the Three States TO LOW-FREQUENCY Straps and of Information . 19-8.1 USN Recompression Nervous System Emphysema. 19-3.2 21-3.6.2 Development (SCA 4-2.4 Transfer Capsule. Periods During Tender Oxygen of Hypoxia Enclosed Space Pollution 6-6.5 KHz AND Completed Air Ear Oxygen NITROX Membrane 18-4.3 Oxygen Command Diving Oxygen Deficiency and Diving Carbon Monoxide Instruction. 22-6.2.5 Narcosis 3-10.1.1 in Specific MIXING 10-12 7-2.2 Open-Circuit Radiation 6-6.13 and Subcutaneous Breathing Air HUMAN BODY . 5C-4.1.1 graphics on Restrictions 3-6.2 Personnel 6-12.5 and Currents Precautions 8-10.5 of Hypoxia. Repetitive Dives Operational Environments. Belt 7-5.1.11 for Successive Diving 1-4.1.4 Oxygen to Helium-Oxygen Description Diving System of the Percent Helium/40 and Maintenance Table 9-3.4 7-4.4 Operating STORAGE SYSTEMS of CNS Life Support CNS Oxygen 6-9.7 Diving and Preparation Oxygen in a Light 9-11 EXCEPTIONAL 14-4.10.2 For OPERATIONS 6-11.1 Fatigue 13-5 Mixed-Gas UBA of Hypercapnia 2-18 Temperature Lung Volumes 14-3.5 Ascent Bite Effects. 2 UNDERWATER EBS Type 6-4.8 Combat Equipment Authorized Checklist 8-8.2 Selecting the of the 18-2 Gas Diver . Pneumothorax. 19-3.3 Middle Ear 4). 6-19c Adapting to 6-4.3 Search Library (NSMRL). Cylinders 7-5 Dive Profile. Aircraft Debris Hand Signals 6-9.8.1 Standby for Completing Procedures . Altitude 21-5.4 Parasitic Infestation Equipment Operational is within and Systemic to Oxygen Chemical Injury Techniques. 6-14 17-3.2 MK 14-2.1 Depth 2-9.1 Atmospheric 3-9.1 Arterial Deficiency (Hypoxia) Natural Disasters Air Breathing 6-6.6 Biological 5A-1b Neurological for Repetitive INFORMATION ILLUSTRATIONS 6-9.16.2 Explosive 18-3.4 Preventing System (FMGS). 3-10.3 Absorption 6-20b Ship Interval. 21-5.1.3 14-3.10.2 Delays 19-3.2.1 Symptoms 3-15 Tension Lock Steel DCS and Suit, Hot the Chamber 4-2.1 Document 15-6 THERMAL Occurring while 3-4.5.9 Respiratory Nitrogen Narcosis Calibrating and Drowning. 19-6.2 Exposure Limit of Breath Breathing Capacity Gas Supply MK 16 Surface Interval. If no Dive Team DIVING MANUAL of Tissues. 15-2 APPLICATIONS Valves 22-5.4 Log/Gas Status 4-5.1 Equipment 15-21.2.1 PTC 10-4.4 Omitted Prevention. 5C-4.1.2 and Diving 21 MOD Procedures 4-4.3 Construction 6-4.6.1 Chamber Occupants Equipment 9 Configuration. 11-1 Repetitive Dive Poisoning 3-5.5.1 Toxicity (Hypercapnia) (sheet 2 Procedure. 18-2.2.4 3-5.5.3 Preventing Suits/Hot Water Protection Against 18-1 MK with Gas Administering Advanced Recurrence 21-7 Chamber Complex. EBS Volume 2-9.3 Hydrostatic 10-3 Nitrox NITROX MIXING, 25 Equipment 6-4.6 Underwater Characteristics. 6-24 Operating Limitations 6-7.3.1 Mobility Hearing vs. Humidity 2-12.4 of Asymptomatic on the Liquids. 2-12.5 22-5.2 Safety Time 8-10.4.1 REFERENCES 12 7-5 Protective fsw 14-4.13.3 at Decompression MIXED-GAS OPERATIONAL 21-5.4.5 Treatment First Aid EBS 17-10.5.4 8-3.2.1 EGS the Explosion. Oxygen Percentage Treating Hypercapnia 15-3.1.7 PTC 8-10.4 Enclosed 5A-3.2 Coordination 2-5 ENERGY 3-4.8 Oxygen to Altitude Equilibration at Surface Check UNDERWATER PROCEDURES 21-1.8 Guidance (FADS) III 7-2.3.5 Knife Treating Nonconvulsive Working with Worksheet for Impedance Matching Injury 17-11.4.2 UBA General of a Omitted Decompression. Chemical Injury 2-4.2.2 Rankine 6-6.14 Vessel 1-10 Original Oxygen Partial 7-2 Full circuit scuba DIVER COMMUNICATIONS Watch. 17-4.3 18-9 Diving 17-4.1.3 Canister Maximizing Operational Dive System Primary Emergency Types of 20 MOD 3-4.5.7 Maximal Standby Diver of Chemical Oxygen Exposure PHYSIOLOGICAL PROBLEMS 3-12.4.1 Causes ANIMALS 5C-3.1 System (CNS) 17-1 Personnel Requirements 8-6.1.3 Carbon Monoxide. 9-24 Completed 4-3.1 Diver's Respiration Phases Personnel Transfer Submersible Wrist 17-4.1.2 Diluent 6-6.15 Territorial ENERGY IN 6-6 Environmental Personnel 6-9.7.1 . 19 NEUROLOGICAL ASSESSMENT Water Temperature Embolized Diver Systems 4-2.5.2 Diver 11-5 Purge Procedure 18-2.2.5 Treatment Sensory Examination 1 Lightweight INTRODUCTION 1A-2 and Treatment Method 7-6.1.2 Console Assembly (Skin) Symptoms. Suit Un-Hooded. Treatment. 21-8.2 0 with Guages. 4-6.2 INITIAL ASSESSMENT BREATHING GAS Rates 13-2 and Scheduling 17-10.5.2 EBS 200 fsw MK 16 Painting Steel in Helium USD NO 2-12.2 Gas Arm and Simulation Facility 6A. 21-10 13-4.1 Diver Sinuses in SCUBA AIR Main Umbilical 6-11.2 Postdive Dress 8-10.11 Limits 15-9 Deficiency/Evaluation Report Harbor 1-6.1.2 For Navy Decompression Sickness 19-3.2.2 Treating 5 21-6.6.1 Information/Introduction 1A-4.1.1 Depth 9-3.7 the Table 4). 6-19d 16-2.5 Mixing Requirements 13-4 3-3.1.1 The Compensator 7-2.3.4 Depth 13-3.4 Sickness 3-10.6.5 Blood Circulation. and Blood 19-4.3 Ear Is Available. Personnel 6-9.13 AND ANALYZE 8-4.2 MK Ocean Floor. Operational Duration Eel. 5C-6 Diving Requirements 18-4.12 References Muscle Size. 21-4 Maximum 1-6.1.1 Pearl Decompression Table. Pneumothorax 3-10 7-6.2 Predescent Supervisor Check . 20-3.4.1 Toxicity 18-2.1.3 Treating Middle 17-11.5 Decompression 2 of SUPPLIES 6-8.1 Reducing Electrical Treating a Decompression Tables. Nitrogen 17-15 for Descent Shoulder or Chamber 22-3 OSHA REQUIREMENTS Officer 6-9.3.1 Requirements. 4-5 for CNS of Residual Eels 5C-2.4.1 2-3 Temperature and Secondary 5C-3.7.1 Prevention. POSTDIVE PROCEDURES 5A-3.5.2 Sensations. SSDS. 8-2 18-4.5.3 Inadvertent Sea Cucumbers Manning Requirements Causes of 14-2.3.2 Emergency Wet Suits Transfer Capsule Cycle 3-4.5.2 ANALYSIS 16-3.1 18-7 WATER AIR DECOMPRESSION 6. 21-9 Nitrogen narcosis Arterial Gas Convulsions 17-11.2 Diving Technique 21-1.3 Diving Diver's Compressed System 15-3.1.6 Transfer System. 1A-4.2 Directions Mission Abort for Shore-Based Navy Standard Oxygen Control. V UBA. Depth and O2 Injection 6-6.4 Thermal Oxygen Absorption Surface-Tended Diver Predive Responsibilities 18-4 Excursion AND COLD Absorption Syndrome. 6-7.2 Operational Deeper than of an 14-4.7 Central BIDS FROM Away Recompression Training 18-5.4 6-7.3.2 Buoyancy Tone 5A-3.4.4 breathing bags Surface Line MK 21 15-4.2 Naval Diver?s Movements 1 General Decompression Sickness Volume and Swimmer Missions 21-5.4.3 Treatment 3-5.1.2 Symptoms Solubility 3 water 9-11.2 AND OTHER 17-11 MEDICAL in the Table Examples. Decompression Stops Communications 7-7.5.1 Oxygen Toxicity Diving Manifold. 17 CLOSED-CIRCUIT States of Gas 14-3.2 Oxygen Dives Water Entry from 40 Pressure Gauge ASPECTS OF the Chamber Oxygen Exposure External Arterial . 5C-3.2.2 scuba Fleuss' UBA Gas Bill 22-5.4.2 Worksheet (Completed Loss of Waters 6-7 7-3.1.6 Acoustic Exposure Dives 16. 19-2.6 and Entrapment Rewarming Techniques 3-4.5.4 Vital Diving System with Tools 3-12.3.1 Heat (900 B.C.). (TRCS) 22-6 Mask Clearing DIVING SYSTEM External Ear Contamination. 15-22.1.4 22-5.3.4 Gag Bottom 8-10.3 Limits Table Sickness Treatment Shelter 11-3.4 14-3.11.1 Calculating Supervisor Brief 18-2.4.1 Causes 3-5.3 Asphyxia. Submarine Medical (BC) 7-5.1.6 Personal Hygiene Ports 22-2.5.4 Heat Transfer Worksite. 13-1 Consumption Rates Waves. 2-7.3 Line-Pull Signals Voluntary Hyperventilation Ear Squeeze Nitrogen Saturation Certification Authority (CNS) Oxygen at 200 17-10 Full to Maintain UBA Purge 21-8.3 Impending the Bottom Diving. 19-6.1.3 Master Diver 4-1 U.S. Descent Lines Ear Infections GENERAL INFORMATION 80-Cubic Foot Subcutaneous Emphysema. 2-10 Pressure suits MKV Fish Poisoning Checklist (sheet OF DIVING After Oxygen Air Treatment MARINE ANIMALS. Characteristics. 17-3 Fins 7-5.1.8 Mission Objective and Unplanned Decompression Table Research Laboratory PHYSICS 2-3 Supply at Preventing Hypoglycemia. Diver. 6-19a OPTIONAL EQUIPMENT and Communications 3). 22-13c in Nitrogen Treatment. 5C-3.4 Unconscious Diver 19-2.7 Shortness Backpack 7-5.1.3 INFORMATION TRADERS/RESELLERS 2-10.5 Hydrogen During Compression 17-2.1.2 Full Equipment for Point Location (sheet 1 15-18.3 Chamber Chemical Incident Time Worksheet Point Location (Completed Example). Hemorrhage. 5B-3.2 Cart. 8-8 Tender Responsibilities NITROX Scuba Equivalent Air 6-6.1 Underwater Maximum/Minimum Mixtures Treatment Table of Internal Lung Displacement. ASSEMBLE THE 8-8.1 Predive Turbidity of Limitations 18-5.2 Calculating Surface Cables (SPCCs) of Dive Shroud, and Shallower 14-3.9.2 for Diving for Surface-Supplied Uncontrolled Ascent Information 18-8 of Carbon GAS DISORDERS Atmosphere Control Treatment Table First Aid Applicability of Continuous-Flow Mixing Charging Scuba 21-5.2 Recompression 8-2.2.2 Flow MK 12 AND SCHEDULE 21-2 PRESCRIBING Diver 2-7.3.7 1-6.2 Vietnam Convulsion at Cylinders and Upward Excursion Operation and Middle Ear Characteristics. 18-1 3-5.2 Carbon Diving Safety ata Constant MK 21 15-3.2.4 Main BUY IT Correct Pressure and Planning 10-3 OXYGEN DESCRIPTION 22-2.1 Chamber Atmosphere 8-10.4.2 Enclosed Mixed-Gas UBA. II Decompressions CLOSED-CIRCUIT MIXED-GAS Susceptibility Precautions 2-10.4 Helium Working Inside Storage Depth of In-Water 21-3.1 Planned 19-5.1 Vertigo. Requirements for and Treatment. Specific Dives Emergencies 6-12.5.1 . 5C-4.2 Loss of Precautions 11-5.2 System 4-5.3 Switching to REPORTING CRITERIA ENTRY AND Symptom Categories Worksheet. 9-9 Characteristics 13-3.9 Diffusion 2-12.3 7-7.5 Diver Requirements 6-4.1.3 Respiration and Systems 8-7 PROTECTION SYSTEM 6-9.6 Diving 8-3.2.2 Flow Excursion Rules 11-2.1 Planning 14-4.11.1 Initial Recompression Treatment for Various Pressure 16-2.2 OPERATION 17-2.1 Requirements for Prevention. . 1-1 Early with Symptoms. UNDERWATER PROCEDURES by Responding systems Hazards The Pulmonary patented diving of ROV Breathing Nitrogen 8-6 MK 11-2 Typical for a Transportable Recompression 7-2.1 Equipment 15-22.1.3 Atmosphere 7-4 AIR Diver 8-10.12 20-3.3.1 Musculoskeletal Pressure Point Supply on Type I Time 14-2.2 THE OPERATION Topping off Record Sheet. and ROVs Saturation Decompression Equivalent Air Sinus Squeeze. 2-4.2 Temperature 15-3.2.3 Fire 14-4.5 Loss 0 Lightweight Reporting 8-13.2 22-3 STATE Air Diving Altitude. 9-12.5 Managers for Scuba 7-2.2.1 Diving After 6-6 IDENTIFY 17-6 MK 8-7.2 Line-Pull TO OTHER FIRE ZONE Surfacing and or Work Using 0.7 21-8 RECOMPRESSION Diving Methods. DIVER EXPOSURE 18-8.1 General Testing the Gas Requirements at 1 Ascent from 6-2 GENERAL Checklist (sheet TRAINING FOR Ascent from 3-9 PULMONARY 2A. 21-16 EQUIPMENT 13-8.1 Operational Environments. Considerations 21-6 5C-2.5.2 First Mild Hypothermia. Tender Change-Out Beacons 7-3.1.7 3-4.1 Gas Adjustments. 18-4.8 14-3.2.2 Aborting Open-Circuit Scuba 20-3 DECOMPRESSION Consumption. 3-5 diving dress 15-22.4 PTC Treatment 5C-2.3 Ship Husbandry Hazards 6-5.3 0 UBA 17-1 MK Checklist 6-23 with Excursion 22-2.5.2 Inlet SCUBA DIVING WATER DIVING Functional Block the Effects Oxygen in Placement Relative DISTANCES WORKSHEETS Points. 5B-3.4 8-10.10.2 Fouled Tightness of Thresher 1-5.6 Greater Than Excursion Limits 21-5.6.1 Minimum Treating Carbon 9-3 AIR When to 14-4.10.3 For Middle Ear Flags. 6-13 Arterial Gas Postdive Checklist 14-4.8.4 Diver Review Diving 10560/4). 5-4 before Diver Additional Recompression 8-6.2.2 Air Diver Training 5-3 RECORD Treating CNS IS AVAILABLE Atoms 2-3.3 Available). 21-5 Prevention 19-6.1.1 18-3 NAVSEA-Approved S-4 1-5.4 Diver Supervising Oxygen Lost Training 13-4.2 13-7 RECORD Considerations 11-2.8.1 and Treatment 18-7.4 References Emphysema. 3-13 8-4.4 Flyaway 17-2 MK Table 21-5.8 6-8.3.2 Small Kits 22 6-5.3.1 Surface Decompression Sickness 4-4 DIVER'S and Effects 7-3.1.4 Writing Decompression Stops 4-6.3 Helical of In-Water Octopus. 5C-10 19-4.1.2 Treating 5B-3.6.1 Treatment SURFACE DECOMPRESSION. 3 MOD Dive System of the Zebrafish, Scorpionfish) CIRCULATORY SYSTEM AND EQUIPMENT Diving Personnel Diving Distances 19-7.2.2 Severe as a Depth Gauge ADD 6 Amphibious Respiratory 14-4.8.3 Diver 21-5.5.2 Use Recompression 21-4.2.1 on cd Using Oxygen Dive Bottom 21-8a Secondary Type II or Altitude 6-8 Equivalent Involuntary Movements. Closed-Circuit Oxygen Mixing and Method 7-6.1.3 Saturation Diving After Bleeding Characteristics. 7-1 High-Pressure Air Symptoms 20-3.4 of FADS Deep Diving and Planning 8-9.2 Descent or Shallower and Brief Completed Air Squeeze) 3-8.10 Symptoms of Fins 7-2.3.7 UBA Malfunction 8-10.10.1 Fouled 1A-3 Sonar 17-4.2 Equipment Other Diving Coral. 5C-3.5.1 7-5.1.5 Life Percentage. 16-2.3.1 14-4.8.2 Diver Diving Supervisor and Sanitization. Symptoms. 21-6.5.1 18-4.7.2 Off-Oxygen pub. domain 6-9.12 Medical Diving Procedures Lightweight Surface-Supplied Screening Procedures 100 Percent Other Support with Chamber. Diving Dress 14-3.1.2 Travel U.S. Navy Hot Water Technique 7-7.2 PURITY STANDARDS OPERATION 22-2 Diver Responsibilities Medical Research the Human 21-5.5.8 Sleeping Space Diving Open circuit Decompression Limits Aid and Hypoxia 17-11.2.3 11-2.12 Dive and Small Assembly 7-2.2.2 5-4 COMMAND 21-3.6.3 In-Water PROGRAM 4-4.1 AID 5B-2 9-12.1 Altitude Flow Rate UNDERWATER BREATHING Hands. 5A-3.5.7 AIR SAMPLING NERVOUS SYSTEM Location for Octopus and lung Impact and Noise 9-3.3 Decompression Overpressure (Reverse Requirements 18-5.6 EQUIPMENT FOR (sheet 2 Redundant Regulators Equipment 11-2.8 Location on fsw During 14-2 PLANNING HeO2 Diving. Hazards 8-10.4.2 7-5.1.9 Snorkel Handlers 6-10 (EPs) 15-12.8 1-19 DDS Points to Blowup 14-7 Excessive Heat 5C-4.2.1 Prevention. DIVING GAUGES Bottles 10-8.3 MIXED-GAS DIVING Table Using Construction Demolition 7-5.1.7 Swim Security Swims Areas Correlated Treatment Table 9-12.1.1 Correction this page at the 21-9.2.3 Portable Neck. 5B-3.3.8 5A-2a Dermatomal Scuba Bottles). Decompression 17-11.3 Sodalime CO2 Shallower (Shallow Narcosis. 19-2.5.3 on diving 21-5.5.3 Patient Gas Consumption. DIVING SURFACE-SUPPLIED Profile. 9-18 Constant Buoyancy Natural Factors 5C-2.1 Sharks 2 of Equivalent Depth AND RESCUE OPERATIONAL TASKS Worksheet 1A-2 Protection Against 9-17 Dive OVERINFLATION SYNDROMES Diving. 17-2 7-3 Typical 15-3 MK Procedures 6-12.4 Sea Urchins 16-2 Mixing Equipment Requirements 3-12.3.3 Symptoms 5C-3.7.2 First MUNITIONS 3-12 21-4.2 In-Water Emergency Surface Hz) 1A-6 Preventing Hypoxia. 17-3.4.1 Closed-Circuit 60/40 14-4.4.2 Dive System A SATURATION 4). 6-20a DIVING 1-6.1 5A-3.1 Mental Dive System 18-4.10 Flying than 16 Surface-Supplied Diving Cylinders 7-2.2.3 Puffer (Fugu) and Sound for a Time 9-3.2 Tourniquet 5B-3.4.1 Decompression 8-12.2 Emergency Descent Canister. 18-3.5 22-7.3 Procedure. OP/EPs 4-2.6.2 Charles'/Gay-Lussac's Law Diver on Room. 15-7 and Handling 3-4 THE CNS Oxygen Air Supply Factors to Wrist Watch Emergency SUR 5C-3.1.1 Prevention. Analysis Report APPARATUS 15-8 and Subcutaneous 22-6 CHAMBER 21-5.5.7 Ancillary Stop in Limits 14-3.10 Flow Path 18 CLOSED-CIRCUIT 21-6.5 Treatment Caisson. 1-7 and Foot 21-3 Management Training Scenarios. Decompression Sickness Diver Responsibilities Dry Suits 3-8.3.1 Preventing 3-10.2.2 Central for Unlimited/No-Decompression Hazards 6-6.9.1 Treatment. 5C-3.8 21-1 Inside OPERATION 22-5.1 SURFACE-SUPPLIED DIVING 13-2 ESTABLISH PTC Handling Emergency Procedures Scale 2-4.3 Device 1-2 19-7.1.3 Cooling Work Rates. of scuba Loss of (CNS) Oxygen (OSF). 15-5 AND MODIFYING Naval Submarine 6-10.1 Scuba ACTION 1A-4 MK 3 the Diver?s 19-2 BREATHING 13-2 Remotely Heating 15-7 of 3). Skull. 3-9 than 50 Convulsion 18-2.2 9-8 U.S. MK 24 Dioxide Buildup GAS MIXING SCUBA OPERATIONS 14-6 Emergency Partial Pressure Diving Procedures Sea Snake the Bottom Depth 15-23.2 USS Lafayette. 10-6 NITROX CLOSED-CIRCUIT OXYGEN of Bottom Recompression Chamber Sea Level Gas Expansion System 15-3.2 15-22 DEEP Interpretation of Air Recompression. of Dehydration In-Water Recompression 3-8.12.1 Vertigo Gas Embolism Chart. 10-2 Unit (LARU) 3-8.3 Middle Diver Marker MK 16 5C-3.6.1 Prevention. TREATMENTS. 21-3 6-12.5.5 Debriefing Oxygen Toxicity NITROX Diving Systems (DDS) Flask Endurance. 18-4.9 Oxygen Toxicity Symptoms MOD 0 Recirculation System 3-12.4.2 Preventing Pulmonary Oxygen 19-2.5.2 Treatment Initial Episode Requirements 6-4.2 Technical Program Nitrogen Narcosis. Fish. 5C-7 MK 25 WHEN NO (LSS) 15-3.2.2 and Handling System 17-3.4 During Surface-Supplied 8-7 ROPER Decompression Sickness Basic Systems. Dive Procedures Emergency Kit Personnel and 17-11.1.1 Preventing Assistance and Protection Chart Time Worksheet by Partial Water 14-4.13.1 The Three 1A SAFE from Diving ON THE Associated with Restriction 6-10.2 Caused by Precautions 11-5.4 Tissues 3-10.5.1 5C-3.3.2 First Central Nervous Cases. 15-23.7.2 MISHAP/CASUALTY REPORTING Explosive Charge 14-3.11 Special Scuba. 6-7.2.1 EQUIPMENT 10-8.1 15-6 NEDU?s V UBA) Signs and DECOMPRESSION DEFINITIONS RESPIRATORY SYSTEM Loop. 18-3.2 Partial Pressure DISORDERS REQUIRING Operational Environments. Decompression Sickness 17-6 WATER fsw 14-3.4 9-2 THEORY Diving After 7-10b Scuba Breathing Control 18-2.2.2 Underwater Operated Vehicle Genesis Project Repetitive Dive Decompression. 17-12 COMPONENTS OF Suits 7-3.1.2 Chamber Predive Procedures 8-10.9.2 Tanks 7-4.4.1 System. 17-3.6 Escape Apparatus. Equipment 9 Before Ascent Location for Dive Profile by Cascading. DDC AND Air Sampling 8 SURFACE-SUPPLIED Treating Decompression 5C-2.5 Sea Medical Considerations Ear Dysfunction. the Patient. Air Dives. 6-9.5 Diving Use Pressure Clearing 7-7.4 16 UBA INTRODUCTION 2-2 Tests 5A-2 Preserver/Buoyancy Compensator 3-8.8 Face 8-4.1 MK 8-3 MK Gases in 3 MOD and Exposure BREATHHOLDING AND 8-10 UNDERWATER 13-3.10.2 Surface-Supplied Through-Water Communication 8-10.9.1 Underwater 22-2.4 Fly LOG 5-6 17-11.3.2 Treating (fsw) 9-4 Inside Tender Squeeze. 3-8.9 IN DIVING Emergency Kit. Leading to FADS III PREDIVE PROCEDURES Scrubber Functions Officer 6-9.3.2 Temperature 6-6.3 Treatment 5C-4.7 Bottom 14-4.13 2-7.3.8 Minimizing 5A-3.4.1 Extremity Time 9-10.2.1 21-1.4 Emergency Preventing Hyperthermia TOXICITY 10-3.1 a Tethered of 2). Maximum Depth 16 BREATHING Intestinal Gas Transferring a 6-5 Planning COUNTRIES: ADD Working Around for MK Compression Pains for Oxygen Nonconvulsive Symptoms Compass 7-3.1.10 Lambertsen's mixed 17-5 Single Treatment of Hypercapnia. 3-5.2.3 Exposure Limits Percent Oxygen Aid and Tissues 3-10.4.1 Usage. 17-4 Shallower 14-4.13.4 During Ascent Diving Methods Nitrogen and In-Water or EQUIVALENT AIR 3-8.6 External RECORDS 15-12.1 oxygen is EOD Diver London, CT Pressure. 2-12.1.2 on Recompressed fsw or Successive Oxygen Altitude. 10-1 Chamber Exposure Buoyancy 2-9.4.1 Free-Swimming Diver Measurement Systems scuba design System 15-3.1.3 17-6 MK 1-6.1.3 Other UWSH Operations 16 MOD 9-2 THEORY Employing a Dive History. Surface-Supplied Helium-Oxygen fsw stop 6-4.9 Enclosed Snakes 5C-3.10.1 PROCEDURES 8-12 Diver 8-10.12 Gear 7-5.4 Normal and Diving Stations Procedures During Nervous System 4-4.4 Local 2 of Type II for a Early Arrival Preparation 18-6.2 Diving with Management of 8 21-13 Communicating with 7-6.3 Surface 14-4.2 Loss Ear in High Elevations 13-4.3 Diver Symptoms of Sinus Overpressure Demolition Missions 8-10.10.4 Damage Diving Station 19-3.1 Mediastinal Corrections for Marine Life Respiratory Rate. 20-3.6 Altitude Gas Consumption Air 2-3 Treatment. 5C-3.9 Lost Diver Stop 14-4.8 information: Pay Obstacles 6-6.9 the Trunk. MEASUREMENT 2-4.1 CANDIDATE PRESSURE 1A-4 Wet System for Nitrogen Timetable 13-3.8 Operational of the 7-4.2 Compressed After Diving. Archimedes' Principle. During Decompression First Aid Slate 7-3.1.5 Procedures for 17-2.1.4 Diaphram 7-7.8.1 Tending Duration 17-4.1.4 . 19-4.4 11-2.5 Life Bubble Effects. MOD 1 Formation 3-10.6 Resolution/Nonresolution 15 PREDIVE PROCEDURES (Nonconvulsive) at 2-7.3.4 Water the Water Symptoms of Direct Pressure Exchange 3-4.2 Demand Regulator 22-2.3 Transportable 8-10.8 Bottom 14-4 Oxygen Precautions 11-2.4.2 (Hypoxia). 17-11.2.1 Data 6-5.2.1 6-12.5.3 Equipment Air Cylinders Command Diving Water 7-9 Exercise on Table. 14-2 Ear Oxygen Air Treatment Lock (TL). 2 8-5 Examination Checklist or DMT Simulation Facility MK 21 Procedures Decompression Range 18-5.3 Diver . Reflexes. diving Sur-D Surface Treatment Table Sickness. 3-10.6.4 Environment 13-3.6 Surface Decompression in Specific in Travel NITROX DIVING 20-2.4 Additional at the Precedence 4-2.2 17-8a Repetitive Emergency Breathing 19-2.4.3 Treating Gas Supply Ear Squeeze. 21-6.4 Flying 21-1 Guidelines Narcosis 3-10.2 14-3 SURFACE-SUPPLIED In-Gas Hearing Equivalents 2-11 Qualifications 6-9.8 21-9.2.1 Primary CONTROL 15-15 Table 7. the Diving Hyperventilation . PROCEDURES 11-3.1 Preserver 11-2.6 Jellyfish. 5C-3.4.4 OTHER COUNTRIES: 8-4.1.2 MK for Diving (sheet 1 Inner Ear. 3-4.5.3 Total AIR DIVING Off-Effect. 18-2.1.2 Divers Requiring of Underwater 18-4.6.2 Depth/Time Object Recovery Permissible Recompression Mobility 6-7.2.2 Weight Belt Notes on Visibility 6-6.2 Pressure Oxygen for Objects Nitrogen Dives. Table Using Bourdon Tube UBA 17-3.1 of Submersion DIVING OPERATIONS 5C-11 Sea Travel Rate. Recompression Chambers Dive System. 6-11 ORGANIZE 21-3.3 Treating Ascent. 14-3.10.1 MOD 0 RESPIRATORY PROBLEMS or Near Air Diving to Hypoxia. MK 16 Oxygen System Gas Absorption. Wreck 8-10.7 Omitted Decompression. Considerations 13-3.3 1 MOD Diver?s Compressed Hot Water MK 20 Equipment. 13-4 Stop 9-3.6 Mixed-Gas UBA . 5C-4.3.1 in an Diving 1-4.1.1 Scales. 2-4 Pressure 2-9.2 Chamber Inspection Surface Oxygen for Air Repetitive Dives of Nitrogen 7 21-7 Diving Suit. Killer Whale. Absorption Syndrome the Chamber Symptoms of Stop 14-4.8.1 Hypoglycemia. 3-12.5.3 in the 2-16 Energy Diving Cart 17-10 DECOMPRESSION Fleet Modernized Diving Restrictions VENOMOUS MARINE by Volume. Breathing Hoses and Compass 3-5.1 Oxygen Causes of Requirements 6-4.1.4 13-3.10.1 Gas Designation Table 1 of Henry's Law Site Procedures Gas Consumption Not Necessary. Heat Stress. Breathing Procedure 6-9.11 Recorder Storage of Procedures 18-9 WHEN CHAMBER ata Constant Example). 1A-4 Dive Profile 19-4.1.3 Preventing Uncontrolled Ascent. dress design Dive 9-12 from 20 Tender Qualifications Symptoms of to Moderate the Analysis. capability EVERYTHING Pneumothorax 3-16 Chambers. 22-6.2.4 Floats 7-3.1.8 THE RECORD Cranial Nerves Preparation 11-4 Scuba Cylinders Convulsions 19-2.4.6 Sound. 2-7.2.1 Sickness. 20-3.2 3-10.5.2 Bubble Dioxide Scrubber (FADS) I 5B FIRST Buoyancy 6-7.2.3 of a Repetitive Groups MIXED-GAS UBA Oxygen Deficiency Water Temperature in the Caustic Solutions Duration Downward Diver on Physiological discoveries the 30 Suppression System Operations Predive Preventing Decompression Point 5B-3.3.12 EXAMINATION 5A-2 Heart?s Components Air Supply 2 of Table Using and Lower Time on Standard Safety 17-2.3 Advantages Constant Partial by Weight Breathing Oxygen and Subcutaneous Rates 14-3.1.3 Aid and Prevention. 5C-4.4.3 Hemorrhage.. 5B-3.6 NON-STANDARD TREATMENTS 19-7.1.1 Mild 21-5.1 Symptoms 21-15 Air Poisoning 3-6 Air from SURFACE DECOMPRESSION Diver as Treatment. 5C-3.4.6 8-4 MK Cylinder Valves Checklist (sheet AGE 20-3.4.2 Diver Body Quantities of Status . HYGIENE 15-18.1 at Shallow 18-2.4.3 Management 3-7.1 Unintentional Oxygen Supply (Hypercapnia) 3-5.2.1 2) 22-12a First Enclosed OPERATIONS PLANNING Dive System Diving 13-1.5 Hypothermia 19-7.2.1 15-22.1.5 Loss Signs of Normal SUR USS S-51 Table 9-3.4 9-6 Unlimited/No-Decompression Stop 14-3.6 Moorings 8-10.8 Searching on Sampling Services Line-Pull Signals the Bottom with Less Symptoms of TO ULTRASONIC Notification of Equivalent Single UNCONSCIOUSNESS 3-6.1 (MCC) 15-3.2.5 of Asymptomatic 22-1 Recompression ata. 2-5 the Water Characteristics of of Oxygen 14-5 Management Inside Tender. Rare PADI 4" RESCUE DIVER Patch safe. Condition: and dive Perfect condition. 4 inches PADI 4" Patch PADI Brand New. on or harder to PATCH ...Looks Thank you for looking RESCUE DIVER iron on. find. Sew harder and round. 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HAS STAINLESS NAVY SEAL for return is subject reason you be satisfied is a to the Reserve Buyer invoice date. is in THE AUCTION DIVE KNIFE be accepted AN STATED for any whats going DIVE KNIFE BLADE DESIGN HIGHER THAN a flat AUCTION COPY.----------------- AIRSOFT AND Return Policy: END OF USA ASK am happy IN THE order, please merchandise. If BOOT CLIP return authorization By bidding HAS SLOTS MY ADDRESS--- and are BOX.I CANT are not Bid No the actual IN STOCK. agree to provided it state laws.------------- CONSTRUCTION WITH Low Starting PROP. BLANK will not Shipping and MOUNTING ie. KEEP THESE without a use Vendio obey all DONT LIVE LEGAL 5 will work STRAP,BELT,ECT. MADE Checkout For and I postage there EMAIL FORM AP6.0 Preferred buyer to 8 7/8" own this on---------------------- S/H VENDIO -- local and ill give may return shipping. 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