Tech Diving Information

 

This website aims to collate information about tech diving. To be clear, I’m not promoting my tech diving courses or selling trips or equipment, I just like technical diving as much as you. Whether you’re an experienced tech diver or a recreational diver interested in learning more about a different style of diving, I hope this site will be useful to you. You’ll find links to other tech diving websites, diving equipment suppliers, articles, and videos.

 

I endeavour to keep this website updated and regularly seek out new content to add. I also have a YouTube channel that collates tech diving videos based on their subject. You can view the videos here or directly on YouTube, and read about my diving background here.

 

Resources for qualified tech divers

It probably won’t come as a shock that you cannot learn to do physical tasks underwater just by reading about them. There is no substitute for proper technical dive training. Yet, it’s always good to brush up on tech diving theory, refresh your knowledge, and see other approaches. Click on the links below or use the menu to navigate through the website.

 

The best way to view the site on mobile/cell phones is to “request desktop site” and zoom out (50% on iPhones)

Video credit: Naucrates UW

scuba diving sitting on a table with some mathematical formula next to it.
Baltic-deco-logo
solo diving
Decompression diver about to conduct a gas switch. This is an essential part of a technical diving course and has to be done right. But there are different ways of doing it. Watching tech diving is a good way to see these different approaches after your course
technical diving books
Deco theory written on a whiteboard
ccr tech diving
TDI articles written by Richard Devanney outline decompression theory. Two divers at Silfra fissure undertaking a safety stop must obey the rules governing offgassing of nitrogen to minimise their risk of decompression sickness
Frankenwald-wreck-norway
Diving equipment sitting on a bench. A sidemount harness and wing, and backmount wing. Sidemount shorhose and longhose regulators, and a DSMB
4 JJ-ccrs lined up on a bench. CCR tutorials on how to disinfect the counter lungs can be very useful
sidemount diving

Popularity of Tech Diving

Since the 1990s, tech diving has seen a remarkable increase in popularity and has transformed from a niche pursuit into a well-regarded discipline within the diving community. There are multiple reasons why it’s become more popular. Dive training agencies have worked hard to make technical diving more accessible, and sidemount has done a lot to introduce people to tech diving- It’s fun, comfortable to dive with, and easier to learn than the traditional backmount equipment configuration (twinset).

 

As more tech divers are seen on dive boats and dive sites, traditional recreational divers become more curious to learn more about tech diving.

tech-diving-twinset-silouhette

Technical Diving Safety

There is an argument to be made that tech diving is safer than it was 30 years ago. Deep diving on air is now considered taboo, and rebreather diving allows helium to be used without worrying about the cost. The sophistication, functionality, and reliability of dive computers have hugely increased, and our understanding of decompression theory has steered us away from previously established practices such as deep stops.

 

Diving physiology has also evolved. We have a better understanding of decompression stress, and know more about Immersion Pulmonary Edema (IPE) than when it was first described in 1989 (It’s called Oedema in the UK and abbreviated to IPO). This knowledge helps divers to plan dives more effectively and manage the risks associated with deep and extended dives. As the boundaries of traditional recreational diving are expanded, more divers are drawn to the challenges and rewards that technical diving offers.

 

Dive Equipment Improvements

Since the 1990s, the evolution of diving equipment and technology has played a crucial role in the development of tech diving. Modern dive computers offer detailed tracking and real-time decompression data, significantly aiding tech divers to manage their safety. Diving equipment is very well made. It’s stronger, more reliable, and often tailored for specific uses, e.g. sidemount harnesses.

 

Popularity of Rebreather Diving

As tech diving has grown in popularity, so has rebreather diving. There are multiple reasons for this. With skyrocketing helium prices, more open circuit tech divers have begun CCR diving to undertake deeper dives without going bankrupt. Moreover, in the last 20 years, significant improvements in rebreather build quality and reliability have increased their safety. The human element is still the largest contributor to CCR incidents and fatalities, but equipment malfunctions are much rarer as long as the manufacturer’s recommendations for maintenance are carried out.

 

Opening up new types of diving

There’s a reason that the course you take when learning how to dive is called the open water course. Within professional diving circles, open water means that you always have direct access to the surface. Recreational divers should never enter an overhead environment such as a wreck or cave without the correct training and equipment. Similarly, recreational divers should never dive deeper than 40m (130ft).

 

Tech diving exists specifically to allow divers to dive deeper, and enter overhead environments such as wrecks and caves. Not simply by using additional equipment and carrying extra gas, but by using appropriate equipment that is utilised correctly by proper training. Taking technical dive training opens up a lot diving locations that are off limits to recreational divers, such as many of the wrecks in Chuuk Lagoon.

 

Technical diver training

For recreational divers looking to explore tech diving, Intro to Tech and Sidemount courses are a great start for learning the fundamentals. Both courses introduce the equipment and principles unique to technical diving. Divers should gain experience before progressing to more advanced training such as decompression procedures and trimix diving. Rebreathers have a separate training path, and I highly recommend that divers gain experience in open-circuit decompression diving before progressing to rebreather diving.

 

With ongoing improvements in technology, equipment, and training, tech diving has become more accessible and is taught in more dive centres than ever. If you enjoy being challenged and love to learn new things, tech diving might be exactly what you’re looking for.

 

Look around this website to learn more about all aspects of technical diving. I hope you enjoy the content.

I would appreciate your feedback on this website. If you have suggestions on how I could improve or add relevant content, contact me. I’d also be very grateful if you could leave a Google review of the website, which you can do by clicking the link below.

Articles by The Technical Diver

Scuba diving books

What is technical diving?

Last Updated on 17/05/2024 by rdevanney