
Technical diving is a specialty type of diving that goes above and beyond recreational diving. This type of diving is typically done for non-professional use and presents greater risks. These risks include serious injury and death, as well as increased risk of death. These are some tips that will help you stay safe while tech diving. Keep reading for more information. Also, we'll be talking about closed-circuit electronics and TecRec. After reading this, you will be ready to go.
TecRec
You may be interested in a TecRec course if you're already certified and would like to learn more. The course teaches you how to tec dive in confined water. It may count towards your Tec 40 certification if you have passed the Discover Tec exam first. The training will be comprehensive and you will have the opportunity to learn some of the techniques and gear required to dive in TEC settings.

PADI Tec 40
The next step for divers looking to broaden their horizons and dive deeper is the PADI Tec40 course. This course teaches divers advanced techniques for augmented oxygen and nitrogen. It allows for higher mixed gases ratios and includes enriched and decompression dives on EANX-50. The course also offers divers the chance to try out decompression software. It is designed to enable divers to safely dive to 40 m or more without suffering from decompression sickness.
Cave diving
Tech divers are able to dive into caves using open-circuit scuba. This is a unique adventure that pushes horizontal scuba's limits. Open-circuit scuba is used by these divers to travel thousands of feet through caves. Each stage has its own regulator. They use only one-third of each cylinder during exploration. They secure the used cylinder for retrieval when they exit the cave. They also use a single main cylinder, which requires two independent regulators. Four stages can be used by a diver to reach a distance of up to half mile inside a cave.
Closed-circuit equipment
Michael Menduno created the term "technical divers" in 1991. It is a collection of different practices and equipment combinations that expand human diving's range. Open-circuit equipment was the most common type of technical diving. These were chosen for their reliability, flexibility, and availability. Nowadays, however, the standard for many divers is closed-circuit equipment.
You have to be able to adapt to new situations
Tech diving involves knowing the basics of decompression theory as well as gradient factors. Although most teams will stick to one decompression algorithm for their dives, some tech communities are moving to dual-phase models. It is important to know what your chosen model does when moving between waypoints, and how to adjust them if necessary. It is crucial to adapt to new situations when tech diving.

Gear configuration differences
Gear configurations are important, regardless of whether you're diving recreationally or for a career in technical diving. To solve depth problems, technical divers will need more equipment. These divers typically use multiple cylinders of gas, regulators, cutting tools, and SMBs. While these equipment may look similar to recreational diving, they are made for specific purposes.