Post by SeaRat on Sept 22, 2011 20:12:24 GMT -8
I was going through my old NAUI Blue Book, the Instructor's Manual for NAUI tonight because I have a unique problem at work. I need to train some supervisors to enable them to do training, and believe it or not, the NAUI Blue Book is still one of the best references I've found on adult learning. Well, included in this book was a section on page 2.4b-1 (3/73) titled:
It went on to list 20 films, and one caught my eye:
Well, intrigued I googled You Tube, and "Sealab I". Guess what? It's there, all 28 minutes of it. So get ready for some really intriguing filming of one of the first experiments in underwater living. See double tank Aqualungs with DA Aquamaster regulators, Duck Feet and AMF Voit Viking (both A6 and A66) fins, round masks, and even a semi-closed circuit hookah and the Mark V (?) semi-closed rebreather. While Cousteau was diving at 33 feet with Conshelf II, Sealab I was at 198 feet on heliox. It is narrated by LtCommander Jack Cooper.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=WTLctPrqC3Q
Enjoy,
John
Navy Films
THe U.S. Navy provides at no charge, many excellent films which can be used for courses. Postage is paid both ways by the Navy. Send a letter to the nearestNaval District Commandant as listed, and ask for a Navy Film Catalog plus Request Forms. Complete instructions are contained in the catalog and on the forms.
number, title, date of issue and running time in minutes. They are all color, 16 mm, sound films, cleared for public showing, but not all are listed in the catalog.
THe U.S. Navy provides at no charge, many excellent films which can be used for courses. Postage is paid both ways by the Navy. Send a letter to the nearestNaval District Commandant as listed, and ask for a Navy Film Catalog plus Request Forms. Complete instructions are contained in the catalog and on the forms.
number, title, date of issue and running time in minutes. They are all color, 16 mm, sound films, cleared for public showing, but not all are listed in the catalog.
It went on to list 20 films, and one caught my eye:
NUMBER....TITLE....DATE....TIME
MN10100....Sealab I....1965....28
MN10100....Sealab I....1965....28
Well, intrigued I googled You Tube, and "Sealab I". Guess what? It's there, all 28 minutes of it. So get ready for some really intriguing filming of one of the first experiments in underwater living. See double tank Aqualungs with DA Aquamaster regulators, Duck Feet and AMF Voit Viking (both A6 and A66) fins, round masks, and even a semi-closed circuit hookah and the Mark V (?) semi-closed rebreather. While Cousteau was diving at 33 feet with Conshelf II, Sealab I was at 198 feet on heliox. It is narrated by LtCommander Jack Cooper.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=WTLctPrqC3Q
Enjoy,
John