A |
| AAS |
Alternate Air Source, such as a pony bottle.
|
| ab(s) (1) |
Abalone(s), a California shell fish pursued by divers and sea otters. The sea otters are better at it.
|
| abs (2) |
What studly macho divers think they have but don't.
|
| ab irons |
Tool used to get abalone off rock.
|
| ABLJ |
Adjustable Buoyacy Life Jacket, horse-collar style, forerunner of the BC. (British)
|
| AGA |
A popular full face mask, the AGA Divator MKII.. In New York pronounced "auger" (with a strong "AW" sound in the beginning).
|
| AGA and com gear |
An AGA equipped with a microphone and speakers to allow a diver to communicate by voice, typically through a wire to a surface support team.
|
| AGE |
Arterial Gas Embolism, bubble causing obstruction to a blood vessel
|
| AI |
Assistant Instructor
|
| air hog |
Diver who sucks tank dry in record time. (Or in less time than it takes their buddy.)
|
| aluminum 80 |
Most common tank in industry. Nominal capacity 80 cu. ft.
|
| alpha flag |
International maritime signal flag, meaning "Diver down, keep clear!". Compare with the U.S. dive flag
|
| AOW |
Advanced Open Water (PADI qualification)
|
| artificial spit |
Small bottles of liquid purchased at exorbitant prices by divers who do not know better to keep their masks defogged. Made by having divemaster candidates fill small bottles with REAL spit.
|
| artifact |
An item removed from a wreck. See souvenir.
|
| ASD |
Atrial Septal Defect, 'Hole in Heart'
|
| ATA |
Absolute pressure. Includes the atmospheres of pressure you rack up under the water and the atmosphere of pressure at the sea level ATM machine.
|
| AV |
Artificial Ventilation. EAR. (British)
|
B |
| back roll |
Leave a boat by sitting on its rail and then rolling backwards into the water.
|
| backscatter |
What you get in your picture after bozo the CN kicks the bottom.
|
| bail-out bottle (1) |
A small bottle filled with your favorite beverage to hold you until your friends come to bail you out of the Cozumel jail.
|
| bail-out bottle (2) |
SD
|
| bail-out bottle (3) |
Extra cylinder of gas carried by a surface supplied diver or a rebreather diver to enable them to reach safety in the event of an interruption of their primary supply. For saturation divers, this would typically be to reach a habitat.
|
| barotrauma |
Damage caused by water or air pressure.
|
| BC |
Buoyancy Compensator.
|
| Braille dive |
Viz so bad you have to just feel your way around.
|
| BCD |
Buoyancy Control Device.
|
| beaver |
On old wetsuit jackets it hung down in the back. You pulled it through your legs, and velcroed it to the front of the jacket. Also called a beaver tail.
Historical note: Some 'real men' claim to have been able to fasten this without obtaining a high pitched voice. This is probably apocryphal.
|
| bend-O-matic |
Dive computer
|
| bent (1) |
Suffering from DCS.
|
| bent (2) |
Suffering from too much tequila.
|
| blowing off |
Omitting something, typically omitting required decompression.
|
| blue water |
Un-green water. Typically found somewhere you are not. Like Cozumel.
|
| bolt snap |
Brass or stainless steel fitting with a gate activated by your thumb.
|
| bondage wings (1) |
Impressive looking back mounted BC by OMS. Features dozens of little rubber straps to confine the bladder when not inflated. Implicated in a number of tech diving tragedies.
|
| bondage wing (2) |
A diving S&M toy
|
| Bottle |
Cylinder.
|
| bottom dump |
Valve on the bottom of a BC which allows you to empty air while in a head-down mode.
|
| bottom mix (1) |
Mix breathed at the bottom, especially when other gas mixes are used for travel and/or deco. Bottom mix should have ppO2 less than 1.4. END is typically chosen to be 99 fsw or 132 fsw.
|
| bottom mix (2) |
What is found in the bottom of used margarita glasses.
|
bounce
or bounce dive |
To dive and surface at intervals repeatedly. A dive where you turn around to ascend immediately after reaching the bottom.
|
| BSAC |
British Sub Aqua Club.
|
| BT |
Bottom Time - definition is agency dependant.
|
| buddy (1) |
For the benefit of officious Divemasters - your nominal partner when you practice the "Same Day, Same Ocean" diving principle
|
| buddy (2) |
The person who always sees more interesting things on a dive than you do; knows the scientific names of all of those furry little green things that live under rock ledges; reveals to the rest of the passengers that your diving techniques are all wrong; and leaves you to wash out their gear at the end of the day.
|
| buddy (3) |
A person you're happy to go for a drink with.
|
| bug |
Lobster. Also crawfish in Louisiana
|
| bug bag |
Lobster Bag. Generally of mesh and/or canvas. To carry all the lobsters that you catch, or the artifacts you recover.
|
| bug hunting |
Hunting for bugs.
|
| butt-mounting |
Dangling the battery pack of a cannister light underneath your doubles, rather than on the right hip. Considered the height of strokery by Hogarthians.
|
| BWRAF |
PADI training acronym: "Begin With Review And Friend". Alt: "Bad Women Really Are Fun"; "Big White Rabbits Are Furry"; "Boogie With the Rich And Famous"; "Bruce Willis Ruins All Films".
|
C |
| canister light |
A light where the battery is strapped to your belt and the light is held in your hand.
|
| CAPS |
Cave mapping software and electronic survey equipment
|
| cattle boat |
We've all been there, done that. There are no cows on a cattleboat, at least not the four legged kind.
|
| CESA |
Controlled Emergency Swimming Ascent
|
| C-card |
Certification card
|
| chamber (1) |
Hyperbaric chamber, for diagnosis and treatment of DCS
|
| chamber (2) |
The room that contains the pot.
|
| chamber ride (1) |
To be compressed in a chamber.
|
| chamber ride (2) |
What you do on your last day at the hotel in Cozumel. See chamber (2).
|
| charlie foxtrot |
Euphemism for clusterfuck, derived from initials.
|
| chokes |
Form of DCS in which you are unable to breathe effectively. Generally fatal unless treated quickly with on-site O2 and prompt recompression.
|
| chumming |
Feeding the fishes. Performed voluntarily by fishermen in order to attract large fishes. Performed by divers involuntarily.
|
| clear (1) |
equalize ears
|
| clear (2) |
free of nitrogen - clear to fly
|
| clusterfuck |
Complete pandemonium, often the result of strokery. Diving on the wrong day with the wrong equipment and the wrong attitude. American. See incident pit.
|
| CM |
Cutis marmorata.
|
| CMAS |
Conféderation Mondiale des Activitiés Subaquatiques, or in English the World Underwater Federation. International federation of scuba organisations. in the United States only the YMCA and the United Stateds Underwater Federation are members.
|
| CN |
Clueless Newbie.
|
CNS O2 toxicity |
Also known as the Paul Bert Effect, tox, or oxtox.
|
| computer |
Dive computer. I can't think of any time anyone thought we were talking about something with a keyboard.
|
| CPR |
Cardio-Pulmonary Rescusitation
|
| cu. ft. |
Cubic feet. 1 cubic foot = 28.31685 liters.
|
| cylinder |
Tank
|
D |
| DAN |
Divers Alert Network. When you have a big problem
|
| DCI |
Decompression Illness, including DCS and AGE
|
| DCS |
Decompression Sickness, the 'bends'
|
| dead reckoning (1) |
Navigating without using external referents, using compass, initial known position, and estimates of speed, current, wind, etc.
|
| dead reckoning (2) |
The navigation method preferred by divers who never learned to use a compass. So called because they are frequently found dead.
|
| deco mix (1) |
Gas mixture used for decompression, such as 80/20 or 100% O2.
|
| deco mix (2) |
alt: 1 part Bacardis, 1 part Jack Daniel's, 2 parts lemonade.
|
| de-fizzing |
off-gassing
|
| deserved hit |
DCS occuring after violating table or computer limits.
|
| Doing It Right |
DIR
|
| DIA |
Doom Induced Nausea. Feeling in the pit of your stomach when you are about to do a dive which is completely out of your comfort zone or experience. A George-ism.
|
| DIN valves (1) |
Superior alternative to a yoke fitting for first stage. Screws in rather than clamps on, and O-ring is "captured" inside valve, reducing chance of O-ring failure.
|
| DIN valves (2) |
The noise made when insufficient care is taken loading tanks into a vehicle, and the valves are banging together.
|
| DIR |
Term invented by George Irvine III to describe the practices that he and others derived from Hogarthian principles. See Hogarthian Diving Style
(DIR)
|
| dive dry |
Diving in a dry suit.
|
| dive flag |
Red flag with white diagonal stripe from top of staff to bottom of fly: . Means the same as the international alpha flag, but is almost unknown outside the U.S. and cultural vassals. Within or near U.S. waters, the best policy is to fly both. Outside, fly the alpha flag. |
| DM |
Dive Master
|
| double-disking |
Using 2 burst disks on the valve of your tank to decrease the chance of losing all your air.
|
| double steel 104's |
Pair of steel cylinders, nominal capacity 104 cu. ft, connected together with bands and a manifold.
|
| DPV |
Diver Propulsion Vehicle. Scooter.
|
| drift deco |
hanging from a lift bag or DSMB during your deco (usually for high currents)
|
| D rings |
D-shaped rings. Attach to BC webbing with weight retainers.
|
| DSMB |
Delayed Surface Marker Buoy, SMB which is inflated at end of dive. (British)
|
| DUI |
Diving Unlimited International. Manufacturer best known for their dry suits |
| DV |
Demand Valve, usually the second stage. (British)
|
E |
| EAD |
Equivalent Air Depth The depth at which air would cause as much decompression obligation as a nitrox with a given fO2 at a given depth.
| EAD |
= (Depth+33') fN2/0.79 - 33' |
= (Depth+33') (1-fO2)/0.79 - 33' |
All depths in fsw .
|
| EAN, EANx |
Enriched Air Nitrox
|
| EAR |
Expired Air Rescusitation (preferred term now is AV in Britain)
|
| END |
Equivalent Narcotic Depth. The depth at which air would cause as much narcosis as a given mix and depth. END is typically chosen to be 99 fsw or 132 fsw for a bottom mix. Assuming that O2 and N2 are equally narcotic in practice; ignoring the narcotic potential of He (which is small, or perhaps non existent); and with depths in fsw:
| END |
= ((1-fHe) (Depth / 33 +1)-1) * 33 |
| = (Depth+33') (1-fHe) - 33' |
Many texts have not been updated to reflect the finding that O2 and N2 are approximately equally narcotic, and instead attribute all narcosis to ppN2. This changes the formula to:
END = (( fN2/.791 ) (depth / 33 +1)-1) * 33 Obsolete
To make things worse, O2 & N2 are probably not equally narcotic at all concentrations. It seems that at certain ratios, the O2 component is more narcotic than N2; and in other ratios, the N2 is more potent.
But assuming O2 & N2 are equally narcotic is the best current practice.
|
F |
| FAQ |
Collection of Frequently Asked Questions (and answers)..
|
| feed the fish |
vomit
|
| FFA |
Feet First Ascent. Learning technique used by new drysuit divers.
|
| FFM |
Full Face Mask
|
| FFW |
Feet of Fresh Water
|
| fin ladder |
A pole with pegs attached to either side to facilitate climbing out of the water with your fins on.
|
| fHe. |
Fraction of helium (He) in a mix. In air, fHe = 0, unless you are near certain natural gas wells, a birthday party, or tech divers.
|
fN2. |
Fraction of nitrogent (N2) in a mix. In air, fN2 = 0.791 = 79.1%. Actually this is a lie, counting the approximately 1% of other gasses in air (noble gasses etc.) as though they are nitrogen, but it is close enough.
|
fO2. |
Fraction of O2 in a mix. In air, fO2 = 0.209 = 20.9%.
|
| free diver |
Breath hold diver.
|
| foul the hook |
To tie the wreckhook upside down to facilitate leaving the wreck. Usually done by the last person up.
|
| FSW |
Feet of Salt Water
|
G |
| gaiters |
Rig designed to reduce the amount of air the lower legs of a drysuit. See FFA.
|
| get wet |
What all divers want to do - go diving.
|
| golden triangle |
Area between the chin and the nipples where it is easiest to access equipment such as knives and regulators.
|
| Goodman handle |
A U-shaped attachment to the light head of a canister light for attaching the light head to your hand.
|
| GPS |
Global Positioning System
|
| granny line |
Line which goes from the stern platform or hangbar to the anchor line.
|
H |
| h valve |
tank valve with two outlets.
|
| halocline |
Boundary between layers of water of different salinities. Looks like a barrier of mist.
|
| hang |
To perform a decompression stop.
|
| hang bar |
Bar slung underneath boat for convenience during decompression stops
|
| hang line |
Horizontal line rigged for convenience during decompression stops
|
| hang tank |
Extra tank, ideally of deco mix, staged at deco stop.
|
| Hawaiian sling |
A long spear with an elastic loop at one end and 3-pointed gig on the other. You catch the loop in your thumb and pull the spear back. When you let go, the spear shoots forward, hopefully into a fish.
|
| heliox |
Breathing mix of helium and oxygen.
|
| hit |
Incident of DCS.
|
| Hogarthian principles |
Principles behind Hogarthian system, named for William Hogarth Main. Originated for cave diving but now adopted more widely. See Hogarthian Diving Style
|
| Hogarth rig |
Hogarth rigged dive gear.
|
| Hogarth rigged |
A method of rigging your gear for maximum survivabililty.
|
| homebrew |
mix, especially nitrox, brewed up at home, or by adding oxygen to a cylinder and then taking it to dive store for fill. Implicated in a number of fatalities.
|
| hookah |
regulator for breathing surface supplied air, either from a tank or a compressor, typically down to about 30 feet.
|
| hoover |
air hog
|
| horsecollar |
the old style floatation device (now BC).
|
| HP hose |
High Pressure Hose. Goes from 1st stage to air pressure gauge.
|
| hydro |
Hydrostatic testing for tank integrity
|
I |
| IANTD |
International Association of Nitrox and Technical Divers
|
| inflatable |
Generally means a RIB.
|
| incident pit |
Series of events which individually would not be dangerous, but each causes a problem, which is increased by the next, until you have a major incident.
The incident pit is a conceptual 'pit' with progressively steeper sides. Anything going wrong pushes you slightly further into the pit. As the sides steepen, it gets progressively more difficult to get out. British. See clusterfuck.
|
| ingassing |
Taking on additional nitrogen (and/or other inert gases).
|
| IP |
Intermediate Pressure, i.e. the pressure between the first and second stages
|
| isolating manifold |
manifold that also has a valve to isolate the two tanks, to preserve half the gas supply in the event of a failure.
|
J |
| Jersey reel |
A large spool designed to hold ¼ diameter sisal line. Used in conjuction with a lift bag.
|
| Jon line |
6-8 ft. line used to attach diver to anchor/shot line for deco so you don¹t wear your arms out. Named for Jon Hulbert, a well-known NE wreck diver.
|
| J-valve |
Old fashioned tank valve with a reserve lever, which signals that pressure is down to 300-500 psi by making breathing difficult. Often seen with reserve feature disabled on old steel 72s.
|
K |
| K-valve |
Regular tank valve
|
| kelp crawl |
Strange motion used to get over kelp on the surface.
|
| kit |
Dive Gear.
|
L |
| legal Lobster |
Lobsters that are long enough to be taken, and do not have eggs on them.
|
| lift bag |
A device which you attach to an object you would like to lift off the bottom. Shaped like a upsidedown garbage bag, you pump air into to raise your object.
|
| LORAN |
Long-range Navigation.
A radionavigation system using land-based radio transmitters (operated in the United States by the USCG) and receivers to allow mariners, aviators, and (more recently) those interested in terrestrial navigation to determine their position.
Highly accurate (better than 0.25 nautical mile (NM) absolute accuracy in the defined coverage area), available (99.7% availability), 24-hour-a-day, all-weather radionavigation system. Loran-C (the present version of this system) coverage extends over the conterminous United States, portions of Alaska, and many other areas of the world.
Less accurate (for absolute position) than GPS, but cheaper, and universally installed on U.S. boats. LORAN is still more accurate for returning to a prior position (such as a wreck.)
|
| Lorraine Smith Effect |
pulmonary O2 toxicity
|
| LP hose |
Low Pressure hose. Goes from 1st stage to 2nd stage or to inflator.
|
M |
| manifold |
plumbing to connect to tanks so that one regulator can access the gas in both. See isolating manifold
|
| MARES |
Diving equipment manufacturer.
|
| mix [noun] |
mixture of gases, often a trimix
|
| MOD |
Maximum Operating Depth for a mix, given a maximum ppO2.
MOD = (max ppO2 / fO2 - 1) * 33 fsw
|
N |
| NACD |
National Association for Cave Diving
|
| NAUI |
National Association of Underwater Instructors.
Not Another Underwater Idiot.
|
| NDL |
No-Decompression Limit
|
| NDS |
No Decompression Stop - no decompression limit according to table or computer
|
| newbie |
Some one new at diving, computers or anything else.
|
| nitrox |
Any mixture of nitrogen and oxygen. Nitrox 32, Nitrox 36, Nitrox 50, Nitrox 80, etc: Nitrox with 32%, 36%, 50%, and 80% of oxygen respectively.
|
| Nitrox I |
Nitrox 32. The NOAA term, the term Nitrox 32 is more precise and therefore preferred.
|
| Nitrox II |
Nitrox 36.
|
| NSS-CDS |
National Speleological Society-Cave Diving Section
|
O |
O2 clean |
Clean enough of combustibles such as oil to allow use with high pressure O2.
|
| ocky |
Octopus |
| OCN |
Obnoxious Clueless Newbie.
|
| octo |
Octopus
|
| Octopus |
Extra second stage regulator, for benefit of your buddy should they want to use your air.
|
| offgassing |
Reducing the load of nitrogen (and/or other inert gases).
|
| OMS |
Ocean Management Systems, an equipment vendor well known for their low pressure steel tanks, and also unfortunately for their bondage wings.
|
| OOA |
Out Of Air
|
| outgassing |
Offgassing
|
| OW |
Open Water. The lowest level of PADI certification for scuba diving.
|
P |
| P |
Pressure
|
| PADI |
Professional Association of Dive Instructors.
Put Another Dollar In.
Pay And Dive Immediately.
Patches Available During Instruction.
Produce Another Dumb Instructor.
Patch and Dollar Industry.
Patches And Decals Included.
Pissed-off Another Dive Instructor.
The largest certifying agency in the U.S.A.
|
| PFO |
Patent Foramen Ovale, openable flap between atria. See ASD. A shunt between the right and left side of the heart that allows some blood to circulate back through the body without going to the lungs first. This means that micro-bubbles don't get removed from the blood stream by the lungs efficiently, making DCS more likely. 1in 4 people have a PFO.
|
| Paul Bert Effect |
CNS O2 toxicity
NOAA - CNS oxygen toxicity exposure limits
|
ppO2 (Bar) |
Exposure Limit per dive (min) |
Exposure Limit per day (min) |
|
1.6
1.5
1.4
1.3
1.2
1.1
1.0
0.9
0.7
|
45
120
150
180
210
240
300
360
570
|
150
180
180
210
240
270
300
360
570
|
|
| PDC |
Personal Dive Computer
|
| persuader |
Any large crowbar, pipe wrench or sledge hammer used for souvenir hunting
|
| pony bottle |
15 to 30 cu. ft. tank, typically worn beside main tank, as a fully redundant emergency air supply.
|
| pp |
Partial Pressure. The total pressure of a gas mixture is the sum of the partial pressures of the component gases.
|
| ppHe |
Partial Pressure of Helium
|
ppO2 |
Partial Pressure of Oxygen. Don't go over 1.4 ATA while diving, or over 1.6 ATA while decompressing.
|
ppN2 |
Partial Pressure of Nitrogen
|
| pretzel |
as in bent as a pretzel. Very bent, doubled over in agony.
|
| primary |
In a Hogarth rig, the regulator with the long hose, wrapped around the canister light on the right of your harness belt, up to the left of your head, around your neck and into your mouth.
|
| psi |
pounds per square inch. psi / 14.50377 = bar.
|
| P weight |
Weight designed to fit in the gully of a standard backplate.
|
Q |
R |
| reduce the signal-to-noise ratio |
Write useless verbiage (noise), thereby reducing the proportion of useful postings (signal) to useless postings (noise).
|
| RIB |
Rigid Inflatable Boat, solid keel and large inflated tubes. (British)
|
| riding the hook |
Hooking up to a wreck by handing a diver the anchor and chain and said diver jumping over and riding it down to the wreck. Used for small/low-profile wrecks.
|
| rolling a tank |
Tumbling a tank to remove internal corrosion.
|
| Rule of Thirds |
Air - a third to get there, a third to get back, and last third belongs to your buddy.
|
S |
| SAA |
Sub Aqua Association.
The thorn in BSAC's side, and the only thing stopping them from gaining world domination (well, err...in the UK at least). |
| S.A.F.E. |
PADI training acronym: "Slowly Ascend From Every dive". Alt: "Submerge And Forget Everything".
|
| safe second |
Octopus.
|
| SAR team |
Search and Rescue Team
|
| Scooter |
DPV.
|
| SCUBA |
Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus. Contrast with SCBA, used by firefighters, which is similar but not intended for use underwater. Also compare with surface supplied air. Scuba is generally used to mean open circuit scuba, as opposed to closed or semi-closed circuit rebreathers.
|
| SD |
Short for "Spare Death", a slur on the brand name Spare Air. A can of air that is too small to get you to the surface in a real emergency.
|
| sea lice |
Yucky rash, actually caused by larvae of thimble jellyfish larva, getting trapped in bathing costume/lycra etc. and stinging. The larvae almost invisibly small. |
| second |
In a Hogarth rig, the regulator under your chin.
|
| set the hook |
To make sure that the wreckhook is securely fastened to the wreck. Usually done by the first person down.
|
| shoot a bag |
To send a liftbag up with a line attached for a floating deco.
|
| silt-out |
Complete loss of vision caused by silt being disturbed, typically by careless finning.
|
| SI |
Surface Interval (between dives)
|
| skin |
Lycra for warm-water wimps.
|
| sled |
Wooden board you hold onto while being dragged by a boat.
|
| sling [bottle] |
Stage bottle.
|
| slobitus |
DCS skin hit (called that because it originates in fatty tissues).
|
| snotty |
Rough sea conditions. In the Northeast, this means 14 foot seas. In Cozumel, it means 2 inch seas.
|
| SMB |
Surface Marker Buoy. Buoy with flag (on a line to diver). (British)
|
| shot line |
A weight with line and buoy attached to mark the location of a wreck. Used primarily by european divers.
|
| 'sorb |
Stuff in a rebreather to absorb the carbon dioxide you breathe out. Adsorbent.
|
| souvenir |
To remove items from a wreck.
|
| SPG |
Submersible Pressure Guage
|
| spring straps |
Stainless steel springs used to hold your fins on your feet.
|
| square dive |
A dive where you stay at the deepest point for the duration of the dive.
|
| stage bottle |
A separate gas supply which is detachable from the diver.
|
| steel 72 |
Somewhat old-fashioned tank. Nominal capacity 72 cu. ft.
|
| stop |
if it weren't for the honor of the thing, the safety stop would be a deco stop
|
| stroke |
diver who's so clueless that he/she is a danger to him/herself and anyone nearby. Often considered an accident looking for a place to happen.
|
| stroke mix |
WKPP divers believe that 80/20 is a bad idea, and refer to it as "stroke mix".
|
| strokery |
The practices of a stroke.
|
| suicide clips |
A type of brass clip with a springed gate notorious for trapping lines and killing divers.
|
T |
| tank |
bottle
|
| tech |
also tek, tekkie, techie, and cowboy
|
| Techdiver Salute |
A raised fore-finger indicating all is well.
|
| thermocline |
Boundary between layers of water of different temperatures.
|
| tie in |
To attach the wreck hook to the wreck with a separate line.
|
| top-to-bottom |
Underwater vis so good you can see the wreck from the surface.
|
| tox |
Slang for central nervous system oxygen toxicity that can happen when diving too deep on air or diving deeper than you should on an enriched air (nitrox) mixture. Also called the Paul Bert Effect, but tox is easier to remember and lots easier to type.
|
| travel mix |
Mix such as 50/50 used to travel to or from the bottom. Travel gas is used to get down to the point where depth indicates that you must change to your bottom mix, and then to get up from that point to where you can switch to your deco mix(es).
|
| trimix |
Breathing mix of three gases, typically oxygen, helium, and nitrogen. Composition is quoted as percentage of oxygen / percentage of helium, e.g. 17/50 is a trimix with 17% oxygen, 50% helium, balance (33%) nitrogen.
|
| tumble |
Clean tanks of internal corrosion, by filling them with an abrasive such as ceramic chips or aluminum oxide, and leaving on a machine that rotates them for several hours.
|
| TUP |
Transfer Under Pressure. A TUP system mates a portable compression chamber to another chamber to transfer a person under pressure from one chamber to the other.
|
U |
| undeserved hit |
DCS occuring despite staying within table or computer limits.
|
V |
| VIP |
Visual Inspection Program. Testing tank for integrity by visual inspection of insides.
|
| viz |
Visibility. As in "viz was great - 15 to 20 feet" (North East wreck diver), or "viz was disgusting - 50 feet" (Florida tourist diver).
|
| V weight |
V-shaped lead weight designed to fit between your tanks behind your backplate.
|
W |
| wah-wahs |
Extreme form of nitrogen narcosis (and possibly oxygen toxicity), described in Cautionary Tales.
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| weight retainer |
Small metal or plastic device used to keep lead weights from sliding, among other things.
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| wet |
Means more to us than just moisture present.
|
| whip |
Adapter to fill tanks from O2 or He bottles.
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| WKPP |
Woodsville-Karst Plains Project
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| wreck hook |
An anchor with bendable tines, also called a grappling hook.
|
X |
Y |
| y valve |
Tank valve with two outlets.
|
Z |
| zodiac |
A RIB.
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