Rebreathers vs Technical Diving: Are We Using the Term All Wrong
For more information about Jeff Bozanic and his upcoming trip to the Antarctic goto: https://jeffbozanic.com/ When in North Florida Cave Country, come stay with Joe and Amanda at the Pod Diver Lodge: www.poddiverlodge.com Is every closed-circuit rebreather dive automatically “technical diving”… or have we been using that label wrong for years? In this episode of Pod Diver TV, host Joe Cocozza sits down with scientist, explorer and author Jeff Bozanic to unpack one of the most argued questions in advanced scuba: Does the equipment make the dive technical, or does the environment? Jeff literally wrote the book “Mastering Rebreathers,” has nearly 3,000 hours on CCR, served as lead technical editor for the last two editions of the NOAA Diving Manual, and received the Conrad Limbaugh Award for Scientific Diving Leadership. He’s also led Antarctic rebreather expeditions under National Science Foundation grants—evaluating multiple CCR units in 28°F seawater and -40°F air. Together we dig into: What actually defines technical diving: decompression ceilings, overheads, and loss of direct access to the surface. Why rebreather gear alone doesn’t automatically make a dive “tech.” CCR bailout strategies and the analog to a controlled emergency swimming ascent. The whole “recreational vs technical rebreather” debate and whether we’re trying to make diving “idiot-proof.” How photographers and vacation divers can use CCRs for longer, bubble-free dives without necessarily going into deco or overheads. Why modern CCR use is to nitrox what nitrox once was to air—more bottom time, same depth limits, different tool. Old-school stories from the 1970s and 90s: Navy tables, Jersey wreck diving, and how the term “technical diving” even came into the sport. If you’re a CCR diver, tech diver, underwater photographer, or recreational diver thinking about rebreathers, this conversation will challenge a lot of assumptions about what “counts” as technical diving. 👉 This video is a discussion, not a substitute for formal training. Always follow your agency’s standards and your manufacturer’s procedures, and seek instruction from a qualified CCR/technical instructor before attempting any advanced dives. #rebreather #CCR #technicaldiving #scubadiving #tecdive #closedcircuit #NOAAdiving #Antarctica #underwaterphotography

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