Bailout bottle

Bailout bottle
Filling a spare air bailout cylinder
Other namesBailout cylinder, emergency gas supply
UsesEmergency supply of breathing gas
Related itemsPony bottle

A bailout bottle (BoB) or, more formally, bailout cylinder is a scuba cylinder carried by an underwater diver for use as an emergency supply of breathing gas in the event of a primary gas supply failure. A bailout cylinder may be carried by a scuba diver in addition to the primary scuba set, or by a surface supplied diver using either free-flow or demand systems.[1] The bailout gas is not intended for use during the dive except in an emergency, and would be considered a fully redundant breathing gas supply if used correctly. The term may refer to just the cylinder, or the bailout set or emergency gas supply (EGS), which is the cylinder with the gas delivery system attached. The bailout set or bailout system is the combination of the emergency gas cylinder with the gas delivery system to the diver, which includes a diving regulator with either a demand valve, a bailout block, or a bailout valve (BOV).

In solo diving, a buddy bottle is a bailout cylinder carried as a substitute for an emergency gas supply from a diving buddy. A bailout cylinder for recreational scuba diving is often a small cylinder, known as a pony bottle, with a normal scuba regulator set, or a smaller cylinder with a combined first and second stage integrated with the cylinder valve, known as "Soare air", after a well known example of the type.

Rebreathers also have bailout systems, often including an open-circuit bailout bottle.[2][3]

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Commercial diving manual was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference Powell 2013 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference inspo bailout was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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