
Pattaya,
Thailand was the location chosen recently for a group
of experienced Trimix divers to investigate a recently
discovered underwater anomaly at a popular local dive
site.
Samesan
fishing port, about an hour south of Pattaya, is the
boarding point for many divers heading off for dives
at a popular local shipwreck called the ‘Hardeep'.
This interesting intact shipwreck lying at 28 metres
sunk during the Second World War. It is reached by sailing
over an area on the chart ominously labeled ‘Explosives
Dumping Ground'.
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My
interest in this area began whilst sitting next to the
boat captain as he cursed the echo sounder's ‘off
the scale' display, "Must be a bad
wiring connection" he muttered, although
it was strange how the sounder always started working
again shortly after. For sure, the water at the ammo dump
was deep…Very deep, probably chosen as a deterrent against
local air divers from bringing up the explosives up to
'go fishing' with.
Dives into the Samesan ammo dump area (part of a busy
inshore shipping lane) always require careful planning
due to the very strong currents, surface traffic including
large and fast oil tankers and depths well in excess of
80 metres. Oh, I almost forgot the whirlpools, updraft
and downdraft currents that send your exhaled air bubbles
downwards out of sight while hanging on to the descent
line. In other words, a perfect technical diving training
site! Challenging as this dive site is, with careful surface
cover to dispatch oncoming supertankers away from decompressing
divers, it is usually survivable, But I had long been
on the lookout for something a little less hair raising,
with less risk of being sucked off back to depth by whirlpools,
chopped up into small pieces by oncoming supertankers,
or more likely whisked off mid-ocean and 'lost at sea'
which has already happened during a deco stop.
Mermaids Dive Center, a leading technical training center
in Thailand, began searching for a safer location for
Trimix diving in the 50-90 metre range.
A large area of seabed around the Samesan area was sounded
with new, more powerful sonar, revealing what appeared
to be an uncharted underwater cliff off another popular
dive site called ‘Shark fin Rock'. At around
87 meters (280ft), out of the shipping lanes, and in an
area of mild current, the new location was chosen as the
site for the final qualifying dive for Thailand's second
Advanced Trimix course.
Divers in the team, led by Mark Ellyatt from Atlantis
Divers in the Philippines, were Lars Steffensen, diving
a ‘Buddy Inspiration', followed by Andrew
Yates and myself on Open Circuit Trimix.
Preparations went on into the night, and finally a 14/45
Trimix was settled on with Nitrox 40 and pure Oxygen for
accelerated decompression.
Conditions at the dive site, which Mark had by now started
referring to as the ‘big black hole of death',
were calm and the viz was good. It seemed surprisingly
survivable.

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A
large barrel sponge and a big gray stingray met us at
the undersea landing spot, it's perfect camouflage unfortunately
leading me to mistake it for the seabed land as I landed
firmly on it with 100Kg of 4 tank tech rig pinning both
wings down. A short circular search on the reel for other
marine life unfortunately only revealed a pitch-black
cloud of zero-viz silt of our own making.
The only casualties of the dive were 3 locked out Aladdin
Pro's, a Suunto in a strange Error Mode, a slightly bruised
ray, and a dive boat captain complaining of pulling his
heavy primary anchor up by hand from nearly 300ft down.
I'll get him a big lift bag for next time!
Safety
Note:
The diving to depths outside recreational scuba limits
must only be carried out following a formal course in
technical diver training. For safety and physiological
reasons, the use of Tri-mixtures or Heliox is recommended
for depths below 40 metres. The use of 45% Helium in the
bottom mix of this dive together with only 14% Oxygen
(a hypoxic mix) allowed the divers to retain a clear head
at depth together with Oxygen partial pressures within
normal physiological limits. The use of air as a breathing
mixture at these depths would likely result in fatal consequences.
Any ‘air' dive computers carried on this
dive were used for depth and time indication only, and
it is normal for them to ‘lock out' and
not give any sensible deco information when carried on
deep, accelerated deco dives of this type. Decompression
was carried out entirely by ‘computer cut' tables written
on wrist slates.
Training
Mermaids Dive Center now conducts Advanced Trimix dive
instruction down to 90 metres (290ft) together with trips
out to the some rarely dived deep shipwrecks in the Gulf
of Thailand as part of a comprehensive program in Technical
Diver education.

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