Nerd-E šŸŽ© pfp
Nerd-E šŸŽ©
@nerdy
What happens when scuba divers have to take a crap at depth? If they swim up too fast they can die. Do wet suits have poo flaps? …or?
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Metaphorical pfp
Metaphorical
@hyp
You have to be at least 14? to get certified so big boy/girl pants only.
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Nerd-E šŸŽ© pfp
Nerd-E šŸŽ©
@nerdy
So then what do they do? Crap their wetsuits?
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Metaphorical
@hyp
You are rarely down for more than an hour, recreationally. Most people seem to be able to plan their bms accordingly.
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Nerd-E šŸŽ©
@nerdy
Most 🤨?
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Nerd-E šŸŽ©
@nerdy
After some research, I have learned that there are toilets in decompression chambers, and navy divers use goddamned diapers šŸ˜‚ ā€œContainment garmetsā€ Oh my god navy seals shit themselves… 🤣
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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Decompression chambers are for commercial saturation divers, i.e., people who may spend days or weeks at subsurface pressure (even if the chamber itself is located on board the ship/rig). So they need to plan not just for onboard toilets for pooping, but also sleeping cots, meals, etc. Thankfully, in recreational diving (which requires no decompression) or in technical diving (which requires relatively short in-water decompression, without a chamber), the timeframes are in hours at most, so they normally don’t need to plan on pooping. As far as peeing is concerned, divers can pee directly in their wetsuit (different people have different opinions on that practice…), or in their dry suit using a special valve. Some divers would rather wear a diaper for peeing in a dry suit because the valve becomes a point of failure. But in either case that’s not for pooping. I’ve only ever dived (and taught diving) in a non-military context so I wouldn’t know about Navy divers, but I don’t imagine it would be much different. TL;DR: diapers do get used in longer dry suit dives but that’s really just for peeing
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Nerd-E šŸŽ©
@nerdy
Good context, thanks.
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Nerd-E šŸŽ©
@nerdy
This all started with a mental image of someone with diarrhea at depth. And as they swim upward, their urge to crap increases as the pressure drops, because the gas in their intestines tries to expand, increasing the feeling of pressure in their guts. And I wondered what the solution was. Then chatGPT basically told me off when I asked, so…
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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Poor ChatGPT must have PTSD by now But yeah, when you learn to dive, you also learn *not* to dive when you exhibit certain symptoms — esp. ENT-related but also diarrhea I don’t know how people with IBS/Chron do, though. I’m guessing they just don’t dive much
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Nerd-E šŸŽ©
@nerdy
Yeah, if the machine ever rise up it would be totally justified after their forced interactions with me and other idiots.
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