When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: scuba diving bcd for sale

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Buoyancy compensator (diving) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buoyancy_compensator_(diving)

    A buoyancy compensator (BC), also called a buoyancy control device (BCD), stabilizer, stabilisor, stab jacket, wing or adjustable buoyancy life jacket (ABLJ), depending on design, is a type of diving equipment which is worn by divers to establish neutral buoyancy underwater and positive buoyancy at the surface, when needed.

  3. Diving weighting system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diving_weighting_system

    A further requirement for scuba diving in most circumstances, is the ability to achieve significant positive buoyancy at any point of a dive. [3] [5] [6] When at the surface, this is a standard procedure to enhance safety and convenience, and underwater it is generally a response to an emergency.

  4. Backplate and wing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backplate_and_wing

    The predominant type of BCD currently used in recreational diving is the jacket style BCD. The backplate and wing differs from the jacket style primarily in the way that the functions required of a BCD (attachment to diver, buoyancy control and attachment to cylinder(s)) are performed by distinct components, rather than a single unit.

  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. Scuba diving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scuba_diving

    Recreational scuba diver The undersea kelp forest of Ana Capa off of the coast of Oxnard, California Diver looking at a shipwreck in the Caribbean Sea. Scuba diving is a mode of underwater diving whereby divers use breathing equipment that is completely independent of a surface breathing gas supply, and therefore has a limited but variable endurance. [1]

  7. Diving equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diving_equipment

    Rebreather diving, closed-circuit or semi-closed-circuit scuba; Freediving or breathhold diving, where the diver completes the dive on a single breath of air taken at the surface before the dive. Snorkelling allows breathing at the surface with the face submerged, and is used as an adjunct to free diving and scuba.