On Monday night I attended a small gathering of the Historical Divers Society here in Melbourne. There were several video presentations. One of the videos was about the M4 Sherman tank discovered by sport divers off the coast of Italy. It was a duplex drive model, used to swim rivers and make amphibious assaults. It has large propellers and uses a rubber skirt to make it boat shaped and keep it's 37 tons afloat. Some of you may have seen this documentary, it was on cable TV some time ago.
Divers here in the Pacific see a lot of wrecks, and discovered, in a submerged tank was an escape SCUBA. It was the WWII version of a Spare Air. The tank was larger and the entire unit was badly corroded. We only saw pictures, which show a cylinder mounted regulator with an inhalation port and an exhaust port at the back of the regulator. It is a bit like the Drager Monomat. The rubber was gone of course, but the function of the variouis ports were obvious to anyone familiar with modern SCUBA.
When I spoke to Ted Eldred, developer of the first commercially successful single hose regulator, he said that many people were working on the idea at the time. I also knew and dived with the late Lionel Martin, who made SCUBA for our diving club back in the late 50s. Lionel used an oxygen welding reduction valve for his first stage and fabricated a workshop demand valve and used them on aircraft cylinders. He was instrumental in developing the world's second single hose regulator, the Sea Bee, by Air Dive sold in 1954. The company is still making SCUBA. While all of this is interesting, it appears that the US Army was making compressed air SCUBA for tank crew escape purposes 10 years before, during the island campaigns of the Pacific. The Cousteau SCUBA was pre-dated by Commeines in France, but perhaps this escape SCUBA goes back even further.
Do any of you know about this? It is new to me and I would like to know more. I was a tank platoon leader and I have seen many tanks and a lot of equipment, but I have never seen anything like the escape apparatus that was found.