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Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] I survived an escape from a sunken Psub this weekend!
- To: <personal_submersibles@psubs.org>
- Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] I survived an escape from a sunken Psub this weekend!
- From: "Alan James" <alanjames@xtra.co.nz>
- Date: Mon, 5 Sep 2011 11:04:17 +1200
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Hi Carsten,
Interesting your experience with the dome in the swimming pool.
I'll try that out when the weather down here gets warmer.
I was under the impression that the dome as a negative parachute method was tested & worked well.
I've had the thought of cutting a vertical slot for my dome hinge pins to sit in, so the dome hatch will operate
& stay in place by it's own weight but in an emergency situation can lift off.
Something that was discussed a while back was adding compressed air toward the end of the flooding
to speed up the process of equalization, as the water pressure & hence flow would drop as it approached the
equalization point.
Regards Alan
----- Original Message -----
From: <MerlinSub@t-online.de>
To: <personal_submersibles@psubs.org>
Sent: Monday, September 05, 2011 10:14 AM
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] I survived an escape from a sunken Psub this weekend!
Hi Vance
On the old Delphin from the mid 60ies they use the dome as negative-parachute just install with two to hand held on the inside. Very
simple and easy. I make a test with a real glas dome in a swimmingpool and the problem is if you keep it to one side you will lost
very easy your air bubble and all bouancy. Not funny in say 250 feet. And on the surface you will have no swim aid with that.
The same is with divers scuba bottle and a Divers mask. No bouancy during the way up and no bouancy help on the surface.
And maybe empty before you manage you way up.
A Steinke hood or a plain divers bouancy aid seems may the better solution. But the Steinke hood gives you no breathing air if you
stays on the same horizontal level. If you catch something during the escape or you wait on the sub to free your guest you get very
easy in a out of air situation. With a Steinke hood you must lift off. With the divers bouancy aid you can..
The other problem on the Steinke is that you have to fill is from a supply line from the sub or a other compress air source.
If you do it by mouth breathing over the small aid valve you have used air in the system and you have to unlook the full mask
zipper..
We comes to the conclusion to use divers swim aid like this and a simple divers mask is the best solution:
http://www.ioua.de/images/spiroweste.jpg
And for real bigger subs we will rebuild our diver drysuits with the mouth and hose piece showning on the spiroweste picture.
vbr Carsten
<vbra676539@aol.com> schrieb:
The dome release might be complicated, but it does provide a sort of built in Steinke hood, and provides an open breathing space
with constantly equalizing air for ascent. Pure blow and go does neither. Nekton Beta suffered a catastrophic viewport failure in
the conning tower. The pilot escaped first and the air release snatched him bodily upward from the sub when the hatch popped. The
second man was forced to swim out and attempt the ascent on his own power. If you will remember, he drowned. There is some
conjecture that the violence of motion in the boat when the hatch popped might have banged the lost man's head, but I suspect it
more probable that the lack of that last blast of air is what did him in. He might also have held his breath, forcing air in
bubble form from lung to bloodstream. They were at 250 feet, I think. Whatever happened, it is a long, long way to go on one
breath and no assistance. Kittredge was the original volunteer test diver for what became the Steinke hood just after WW II. He
made some pretty good ascents, and believed the equipment would save lives. As Carsten said, all things being equal, and shallow,
it's just as east to slip on a mask and an escape bottle and swim up. But deep or cold or dark, or a combination, might well need
more thought.
Vance
-----Original Message-----
From: Alan James <alanjames@xtra.co.nz>
To: personal_submersibles <personal_submersibles@psubs.org>
Sent: Sun, Sep 4, 2011 12:59 pm
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] I survived an escape from a sunken Psub this weekend!
Thanks Carsten, valuable research.
I remember Phil describing a system for escaping at depth, where the dome was hinged on the
inside & straps were attached to the base of the dome & under the arms of the occupants.
The hinges were removed from the dome & the hull was flooded. Eventually the dome would lift off
& take the crew member with it, with his head in the dome breathing it's air.
This system was for escaping at depth where the nitrogen narcosis would make the occupant
a totally useless drunken jellyfish.
It seems a very complicated issue depending on the depth. You wouldn't want to flood too fast &
burst your ear drums, but you wouldn't want to flood so slow that you would get the bends when
you came up.
Regards Alan
----- Original Message -----
From: MerlinSub@t-online.de
To: personal_submersibles@psubs.org
Sent: Monday, September 05, 2011 8:13 AM
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] I survived an escape from a sunken Psub this weekend!
Hi Alan,
you can not open a dome hatch even in relative shallow water without equliaze the pressure.
The water pressure on the dome will prevent this.
The boat was flooded. But because of the shallow water just with a relative small amount of water.
The first test we make we flooded the boat complete with the 2 inch flooded vale open to let the water in and the 3/4 inch
overpressure vale open to let the water out. Only in the domes was air. The escape was relative soft because it was not so much
air anymore in the boat. But it takes 8-9 minutes to flood the complete boat. And teh crew is relative dived in the sub.
Than we figure out that you have allways to unlook the dome hatch before you try to flooded the boat. The simple reason is that
you can not open the dome latches with the boat allready flooded for to reasons: First you have 30 Liters air in the dome
create a lot of lift. And if you flood the boat you have a overpressure in the sub (distance of the compressed air from the
inside water level to the hatch seal) which create also a hell of lift to the dome latches - about a quader of a ton..
At the end you can not open the dome.
Rule : ALLWAYS unlock the dome you want to exit before you flood the sub..
If you do that way the dome open automaticly if the pressure on the o-ring is equilazied by the pressure and the
lift force op the dome itself. In our case it was just seconds after you open the vale. For this reason we bild out the dome
springs to get less opening force and more time. The normal time than was 1-2 minutes from opening flood vale a both crew get
out.
We make a lot of test: But allways sunk the sub to the ground, than unlook the dome, than flood.
One dome unlook, one looked, water rush in an air out on the unlooked dome. Pilot goes out there.
After this the second mate open his dome with not so much lift (only the lift of the air in the dome).
One dome unlook, one looked, water rush in an air out on the unlooked dome. Pilot goes out there.
Second mate dive under and leave the sub via the open pilot hatch.
Both dome unlooked, both open simoutanisly both leave the sub via there own domes, one first the other after sonme seconds.
My conclusion is that on a double dome sub it is the best that only the pilot dome is unlooked. Than flood the sub. Pilot dome
opens and the pilots get all the heavy shower, air rush out, violent sound and out of vissiblity effect and than he goes out and
wait. The guest stays in his dome -bubble until eyerthuing is silence after some seconds. Than he follow by the open dome of
the pilot or the pilot open his dome from outside to help him to escape.
We escape without any gear, with diver mask only, with diver mask and diver bouancy aid, with scuba gear and with Steinke
hoods. We learn a lot of which unit is the best for what purpose.
01) For a Psub the best unit ios a diver mask with a old fashion divers bouancy aid. the tyo with a breathing hose and a small
spare air bottle.
02) The Steinke hood works only during a acent to the surface. If you seat a minutes in a sunken, flooded submarine and without
a bypass air line to the hood - you can not breaze anymore. We feel than 01) is the better solution. The Steinke hood is may
the better solution on really long escapes.
03) The concluion for large submarines like Euronaut is than we will rebuild or dry diversuits. In that way that we install a
breathing hose to the suits. In that way we can breath out of the suits during the way on the surface. And need no dive gear
at all. We conect the inflator hose to the ships emergency breahting hose line systzen short before we leave the sub.
We learn a lot more from the exercise but anyhow this letter is allready long.
vbr Carsten
"Alan James" <alanjames@xtra.co.nz> schrieb:
> Can you explain what was happening Carsten?
> It looks like you didn't flood the sub at all prior to opening the hatch.
> I guess that because you were so shallow there was no pressure on the hatch & it
> could be opened easily.
> Can you please do it again at 100 ft
> Regards Alan
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: <MerlinSub@t-online.de>
> To: <personal_submersibles@psubs.org>
> Sent: Monday, September 05, 2011 6:49 AM
> Subject: [PSUBS-MAILIST] I survived an escape from a sunken Psub this weekend!
>
>
> Hi submadmans, some of us a little more crazy than others,
> or more serious - depents may on the view of the observer.
>
> http://www.youtube.com/user/CarstenStandfuss#p/a/u/2/jsBCnWZCj7E
>
> http://www.youtube.com/user/CarstenStandfuss#p/a/u/1/mKe76HRVPSQ
>
> http://www.youtube.com/user/CarstenStandfuss#p/a/u/0/gtQ3HNuxcGA
>
> We learn a lot on this weekend.
> And the is now some serious experience we can share.
>
> vbr Carsten
>
>
>
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