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  2. Personal flotation device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_flotation_device

    Personal flotation devices being worn on a navy transport . A personal flotation device (PFD; also referred to as a life jacket, life preserver, life belt, Mae West, life vest, life saver, cork jacket, buoyancy aid or flotation suit) is a flotation device in the form of a vest or suit that is worn by a user to prevent the wearer from drowning in a body of water.

  3. Buoyancy aid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buoyancy_aid

    Over the head vest, where the one-piece vest is pulled on over the head. Front zip jacket , where the buoyancy aid is worn like a regular jacket , zipped up at the front. This design limits the front-buoyancy as it requires two separate blocks of foam and a gap for the zip .

  4. Canadian Armed Forces Divers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_armed_forces_divers

    Royal Canadian Navy Clearance Divers' Prayer On 30 April 2015 the RCN Clearance Diving Branch adopted the following prayer as their official branch prayer. The prayer was originally written by Padre David Jackson, the unit chaplain of Fleet Diving Unit Atlantic, for the occasion of the 60th Anniversary of the RCN Clearance Diving Branch.

  5. Fenzy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fenzy

    Fenzy is a scuba diving and industrial breathing equipment design and manufacturing firm. It started in or before 1920 in France. Finally Honeywell bought them out.. In 1961 the company's founder and owner, Maurice Fenzy, invented a divers' adjustable buoyancy life jacket (ABLJ) (European terminology) or buoyancy compensator (BC) (North American terminology) [1] that became so well known that ...

  6. Clearance Diving Branch (RAN) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clearance_Diving_Branch_(RAN)

    The RAN has used divers on a regular basis since the 1920s, but it was not until World War II that clearance diving operations came to the fore, with RAN divers working alongside Royal Navy divers to remove naval mines from British waters, and from the waters of captured ports on the European mainland such as Hugh Syme, John Mould, George Gosse and Leon Goldsworthy all highly decorated. [9]

  7. Kommando Spezialkräfte Marine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kommando_Spezialkräfte_Marine

    In Eckernförde a combat frogman group was set up, it consists of a mine clearance diver company and a commando frogmen company. Allegedly the weapon diver group has 250 men. The commando frogmen company had, according to strength and equipment records, 3 groups, each with 16 men. Of it, approximately 40 men are actively operational.