Testing an ROV
How do you test an ROV? In the Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary's training and #dive tank! With 600,000 gallons of water, it's handy for training everyone from marine archaeologists to ROV pilots. #EarthIsBlue
Transcript
Tane Casserley here at the Thunder Bay
National Marine Sanctuary and we're standing on
the deck Thunder Bay training and dive tank.
This facility is wonderful because we
can bring in other sanctuary sites.
We can bring and other NOAA partners.
We can teach them how to do archaeology
in a controlled environment
If they need to learn how to use ROVs
we can do that here.
Here's the inside of the Thunder Bay
National Marine Sanctuary dive locker.
This is where we keep all the gear.
This is all the good stuff.
You can see here we have all our BCDs.
Our bouncy compensator devices all
our dry suits. We do we're dry suits here
at Thunder Bay the water can be quite cold
range anywhere between the mid 30s
to the low 70s. We also use gear in
Thunder Bay such as rebreathers
we have to dive deeper to see some these
pristine wrecks.
Here's a really good example of that.
This is called the megalodon closed circuit rebreather.
But sometimes you know we use regular
open circuit dive gear.
We have two compressors here we have
an air compressor and nitrox compressor
that can blend 22% to 40% nitrox.
Air is 21% oxygen and the rest is nitrogen
and what this machine does here this
compressors actually adds more
oxygen to the air so you could take up
to 22% to 40%
and its a safety benefit and
sort of a health benefit as well.
This is a wonderful resource that use here for
our NOAA divers and for our partners.
This is probably one of the only training
and testing tanks in the great lakes.
Just the sheer size that were lucky enough to be on the
location of former paper plant so this
is all ready part of that industrial infrastructure.
We were lucky that it will be used we
could fill it up use it for our purposes.
Again 80 FT across 18 FT deep and 600,000 gallons.
A controlled environment for outreach, education, test equipment and search and rescue training.