Dive Gear References

The Essentials of Deeper Sport Diving

The Essentials of Deeper Sport Diving
John Lippman
AquaQuest, 1992
320 pages, illustrated, b&w

This book is not about technical diving but covers many important aspects of decompression physiology and deep-diving techniques and equipment that any diver ought to know. I see it for 1 cent used on Amazon - get a copy !!!


US Navy Dive Manual

US Navy Dive Manual
1999, updated 2001

Free Download: US Navy Dive Manual

Michael Langford's 35mm Handbook

Michael Langford's 35mm Handbook
Michael Langford
Knopf, 1998
224 pages, illustrated, color

A terrific introduction to the basics of photography - everything from f-stops to style. Clear and concise. Basic concepts still apply to digital even if film is dead.

Scuba Regulator Maintenance and Repair

Scuba Regulator Maintenance and Repair
Vance Harlow
Airspeed Press

Explains in detail how regulators work, how they are serviced, and how they are often not serviced. Things you should know about your equipment, even if you don't plan to do your own work.

The Oxygen Hacker's Companion

The Oxygen Hacker's Companion
Vance Harlow
Airspeed Press

How to handle oxygen, O2-clean your own equipment, mix your own Nitrox, etc.

Wetsuit and Drysuit Maintenance and Repair

Wetsuit and Drysuit Maintenance and Repair
Steven Lindblom
Airspeed Press


aluminum tanks

Scuba tanks are made out of steel or aluminum. Aluminum is cheaper and has somewhat better corrosion resistance, but steel is stronger. The "standard" modern scuba cylinder is the aluminum "80", which actually holds about 77 cubic feet of air at its rated pressure of 3000 psi. This type of tank has probably caught on because for an average-sized person with reasonably good breathing skills, this size is just big enough to cover your allowable no-decompression bottom time and no more. For smaller people, 63 cubic foot aluminum tanks are available, while for larger folks there are choices as big as 120 cuft.

Printed from njscuba.net