Sybarite
Well-Known Member
Would it be possible for a life-jacket to contain a self-inflating helium foil balloon with foil streamers to facilitate locating somebody in the water?
Any serious responses?
Would it be possible for a life-jacket to contain a self-inflating helium foil balloon with foil streamers to facilitate locating somebody in the water?
The only downsides I can think of are that you increase weight and bulk in the jacket and that helium is relatively expensive so refills would be costly. If they can justify £10 for a CO2 refill which is standard and used in many industries just think how much a helium one would be in a chandlery when there are no other uses for a small cylinder of it.QUOTE]
Surely the problem is that a CO2 bottle contains liquid CO2 under pressure which expands into a lot of CO2 gas at atmospheric pressure. Helium cannot be liquid at normal temperatures even under pressure (it's a refrigerant, remember), so a large bottle (heavy, as you say) would be needed to contain a large volume even under pressure.
Then, of course, floating in the air requires minimum wind. Any breeze will blow it down flat on its tether, especially if with tassels...
Mike.
The only downsides I can think of are that you increase weight and bulk in the jacket and that helium is relatively expensive so refills would be costly. If they can justify £10 for a CO2 refill which is standard and used in many industries just think how much a helium one would be in a chandlery when there are no other uses for a small cylinder of it.QUOTE]
Surely the problem is that a CO2 bottle contains liquid CO2 under pressure which expands into a lot of CO2 gas at atmospheric pressure. Helium cannot be liquid at normal temperatures even under pressure (it's a refrigerant, remember), so a large bottle (heavy, as you say) would be needed to contain a large volume even under pressure.
Then, of course, floating in the air requires minimum wind. Any breeze will blow it down flat on its tether, especially if with tassels...
Mike.
A balloon in the form of a kite then?
There's no requirement for the gas to be a liquid. I don't think the CO2 even is a liquid in those cannisters, certainly it isn't in dive cylinders, and neither is the oxygen or nitrogen. Helium is often compressed in cylinders for Diving as well as for the fun balloon industry and as far as I'm aware it's not liquid in either scenario.
Why stop at that? With enough He they could float several feet above the surface of the water awaiting rescue.
Probably the available electronic location systems make more sense. It is extremely difficult to see any small object at sea, even less if it is a little baloon near the water.
Didn't they try similar stuff in WW11?
Dw
The idea of the foil was to make it at least visible to radar.
No, it's not a requirement, just that gases are much more compact if liquified. I didn't know that CO2 was used for diving; what on earth for? Agreed O2 or N2 (again, is N2 used separately for diving? I know pure O2 is problematic) cannot be liquid in unrefrigerated tanks either. It's all a matter of quantities...
I think that a kite is a much better idea, but am unsure if automatic deployment could be achieved.
Mike.
Make the LJ big enough and you can put what you like in it!
CO2 isn't used for diving, it's a component of air, as is nitrogen. Divers (normal ones) use air in their cylinders. Advanced divers (or nutters, depending on your viewpoint) use oxygen and Helium to go deeper without the narcosis effects of nitrogen. They also reduce the oxygen content to reduce partial pressure and therefore the risk of oxygen poinsoning (yes, that's a real thing!) so often have almost pure helium in the cylinder - still a gas though, even compressed. They also use Argon in their suits to stay warm - useless for breathing though![]()