
Technical diving is a specialty type of diving that goes above and beyond recreational diving. Technical diving is often done for non-professional reasons and poses higher risks. These include greater risks of serious injury and death. Here are some safety tips for tech diving. Continue reading to find out more. Also, we'll be talking about closed-circuit electronics and TecRec. This will make it easy for you to get started.
TecRec
You may be interested in a TecRec course if you're already certified and would like to learn more. This course teaches the basics of tec-diving in confined water. If you pass the Discover Tec test first, it could count towards your Tec40 course. Along with the training you will receive, you will also learn how to use certain gear and techniques to be able dive in TEC configurations.

PADI Tec 40
For those divers who want to expand their horizons to deeper dives, the PADI Tec 40 course is the next logical step. This course teaches divers how to use enriched air and nitrogen. Divers can also learn about decompression diving using EANX 50. Divers will have the opportunity to learn how to use decompression technology. This software is designed for safe diving to depths of 40 meters or greater without exposing themselves to decompression sickness.
Cave diving
Tech divers love cave diving. It is a challenging adventure that challenges the boundaries of horizontal scuba. Open-circuit scuba is used by these divers to travel thousands of feet through caves. Each stage has its own regulator. They use only one-third of each cylinder during exploration. They keep the unused gas cylinders safe until they can be used again. They use one main cylinder that requires two regulators. Four stages can be used by a diver to reach a distance of up to half mile inside a cave.
Closed-circuit equipment
Michael Menduno in 1991 invented the term "technical dive". It refers to a range of techniques and equipment configurations that are used to increase human diving's capabilities. Open-circuit equipment was the most common type of technical diving. These were chosen for their reliability, flexibility, and availability. However, today, many scuba divers use closed-circuit equipment, which is becoming more popular.
Being flexible to new situations
Tech diving involves knowing the basics of decompression theory as well as gradient factors. Many teams still use the same decompression algorithm. But, a growing portion of tech professionals are switching to dual-phase models. Understanding the parameters your chosen model uses to travel between waypoints is key. Also, know what you can do to adapt to unforeseen circumstances. Safety requires tech diving to allow you to adapt to changing situations.

Gear configuration differences
Gear configurations are important, regardless of whether you're diving recreationally or for a career in technical diving. Technical divers require more equipment to solve depth problems. These divers usually use multiple cylinders for gas, regulators as well as cutting and other tools. These divers use equipment that is similar to recreational divers but it's made for different purposes.