Is technical diving for you? NAUI Technical Courses
are designed for divers whose interests include diving
beyond traditional recreational limits and specific
areas of technical diving. Accordingly, technical diving
courses are designed to provide more detailed training
than specialty diver courses, and result in more extensive
qualifications.
NAUI was the first training agency to certify all levels
of diving ranging from traditional recreational training
through all levels of technical training. Technical
diving is a potentially dangerous activity that requires
very special training, equipment and support. NAUI Technical
Instructors are trained to not only qualify you for
your dive objective, but also to give you a healthy
respect for the technical diving environment.
Below are just some of the NAUI Technical Courses available
through your local NAUI Technical Training
Dive Center. Be sure to ask your NAUI Technical
Instructor about previous training or experience you
may need and get ready to enter the unique world of
Technical Diving!
Cave Diver (Levels
I, II and III)
Cavern Diver
CCR Mixed Gas Diver
Closed Circuit Rebreather Diver
Decompression Technique
Heliair Diver
Helitrox Diver
Ice Diver
Intro to Tech
Mixed Gas Blender and O2 Service Tech
Semi-Closed Rebreather Diver
Technical Nitrox Diver
Technical Support Leader
Technical Wreck
Penetration Diver
Tri-Mix Diver (Levels I and II)
Wreck Penetration Diver
Become a NAUI Technical Support Leader! The Technical
Support Leader (TSL) course is designed to train knowledgeable
NAUI Divemasters and Assistant Instructors who are also
technical divers to act as part of a support team for
technical diving and training activities.
A Technical Support Leader provides assistance to teams
of technical divers provided diving conditions and methods
approximate those in which your TSL training occurs.
Your TSL responsibilities might include shuttling of
equipment, removal and replacement of staged decompression
gases and equipment, rigging and setting up decompression
stations and gases and monitoring divers during ascent
and staged decompression stops.
To enroll in a TSL course, you must be 18; be certified
as a NAUI Technical EANx Diver, NAUI Rescue Diver, Oxygen
Provider and NAUI Divemaster or NAUI Assistant Instructor;
have assisted with the open water portions of at least
two entry-level or continuing education diver courses;
and 75 logged dives with 10 dives below 100 fsw / 30
msw, and 15 Nitrox dives.

The Technical EANx (Nitrox) Diver course will provide
you with the skills and knowledge needed to minimize
the risks of utilizing optimal breathing gas EANx mixtures
of 25% through 80% (oxygen) for dives to a depth of
130 fsw / 40 msw not requiring stage decompression,
using 80% EANx for decompression and 25% to 60% EANx
for bottom mix.
Your instructor can combine this course with the Decompression
Techniques Diver Course with additional training and
dives. You¡¯ll need to be 18 and have a minimum certification
of NAUI EANx Diver and Deep Diver (or equivalent) and
50 logged dives with 10 dives on EANx to enroll in the
Technical EANx Diver course.

The Helitrox Diver course teaches you how to plan
and execute Helitrox-based dives that may require stage
decompression and utilize EANx and/or oxygen for stage
decompression. This course is designed to teach you
the hazards of utilizing Helium for dives to a maximum
depth of 150 fsw / 46 msw that may require stage decompression,
utilizing EANx mixtures and/or oxygen during decompression.
During your training, you¡¯ll complete at least four
open water dives using a Helitrox mixture (26% oxygen
/ 17% helium) of which at least one will be a repetitive
dive. Your NAUI Technical Instructor may combine your
Helitrox course with the Decompression Techniques Diver
Course, with additional training and certification dives.
Your studies will include the knowledge necessary to
plan and safely execute Helitrox dives including gas
needs and requirements, oxygen toxicity limitations,
nitrogen narcosis limitations, and emergency planning,
including omitted decompression, oxygen toxicity, decompression
sickness, and equipment failure.
Topics covered will also include emergency and contingency
procedures, entry and descent techniques; inert gas
narcosis and oxygen toxicity; variable ascent-rate techniques
and deep-stop models; diver trim, ballast and buoyancy
compensation; tethered or untethered decompression methods;
shore or boat based dive team support and chamber locations;
communications and emergency breathing gases; and NAUI
Technical Equipment Configuration (NTEC).

As you continue your technical diver training, one
of the courses you¡¯ll want to take is Decompression
Techniques, in which you will gain a working knowledge
of the theory, methods and procedures of planned stage
decompression diving. Your training will include a minimum
of six dives including planning and executing a standard
stage decompression dive less than 130 fsw / 40 msw.
Your instructor will also teach you equipment requirements
including team requirements and NAUI Technical Equipment
Configuration (NTEC), and decompression breathing gas
mixtures (including oxygen, Helitrox, and EANx). You¡¯ll
learn the practical skills and knowledge you need for
decompression diving within course parameters.
If you are 18 years of age, posses at least NAUI Master
Scuba Diver, Deep Diver Specialty, Technical EANx Diver
and Helitrox Diver certifications (or their equivalents),
and have 75 logged dives, you may enroll in the Decompression
Techniques course. With additional dives and training,
your instructor may opt to combine this course with
Technical EANx (Nitrox) Diver or Helitrox Diver.

The NAUI Heliair Diver course provides the training
and experience you need to competently plan and execute
extended range dives that require stage decompression
utilizing Heliair and EANx and/or oxygen. You¡¯ll learn
the hazards and proper use of Heliair for dives to maximum
of 180 fsw / 55 msw that require stage decompression,
utilizing EANx mixtures and/or oxygen during decompression.
This course may be combined with the Decompression
Techniques Diver Course with additional dives and training.
As with all courses, there are minimum requirements:
for Heliair Diver, you must be 18 years of age; have
logged at least 75 dives, (10 of which must be decompression
dives in the environment in which the course is being
taught); and be certified as a NAUI Technical EANx Diver,
Decompression Techniques Diver unless combined with
this course, and NAUI Helitrox Diver or equivalent thereof.

Cavern Diver is a no-decompression course designed
to teach you the fundamental skills and knowledge for
cavern diving above 100 fsw / 30 msw and at a combined
depth and distance penetration less than 200 feet /
60 meters from the surface.
During your course, you will complete a minimum of
three cavern dives in at least two different sites within
daylight and no-decompression limits, and become proficient
in the use of spools and reels, team and line placement,
and zero visibility/touch contact communications while
following a line, as well as many other skills necessary
to be a competent Cavern Diver.
Dive planning (including EANx if used) penetration
distance within cavern diver limits, safety drills,
equipment checks, gas sharing, guideline deployment
and removal techniques, propulsion techniques, lost
teammate and guideline drills and emergency procedures
will also be covered in your Cavern Diver course.

Does the thought of diving through an underwater cave
intrigue you? Are you fascinated by the possibility
of diving where most divers never get to go? Cave Diver
Levels I, II and III are actually three courses, each
of which builds on skills and knowledge taught in the
Cavern Diver course and/or respective previous level
Cave Diver courses, giving you the next level of skills
and experience you need to become a certified Level
I, II or III Cave Diver.
Once you complete your Level I Cave Diver course, you
will be able to plan and execute limited penetration,
simple-navigation no decompression cave dives; certified
Level II Cave Divers are qualified to plan and execute
multiple navigational decisions on cave dives with staged
cylinders; certified Level III Cave Divers are qualified
to plan and execute extended penetration cave dives.
If you¡¯re 18 years old and at least a NAUI Advanced
Scuba Diver and Nitrox Diver with 75 logged dives, you
may be ready for the challenge of cave diving!

NAUI¡¯s Ice Diver course will provide you with a basic
understanding of the knowledge and skills needed to
minimize risks and gain experience in ice diving, penetration
under solid ice.
During your Ice Diver course, you¡¯ll master many skills
and gain knowledge about ice dive organization, procedures,
problems, risks and planning, equipment removal and
replacement, underwater navigation, use of harnesses
and line techniques, silt-out/black-water procedures,
ice dive planning, exposure hazards and treatment, ice
cutting and characteristics, signaling and much more.
You¡¯ll also gain knowledge about atmospheric conditions
and characteristics of ice structure; wind chill factors,
cold stress, dehydration and first aid; surface clothing
and dry suits; penetration holes and dive site preparation.
Your three required training dives will be limited
to a maximum depth of 40 feet / 12 meters and not more
than 100 feet /30 meters in a horizontal line from the
penetration hole. You can enroll in the Ice Diver course
as long as you are 18 years of age, have a NAUI Advanced
Scuba Diver certification and have at least 50 logged
dives in a variety of conditions.

There are inherent hazards and risks associated with
exploring an underwater wreck. The Wreck Penetration
Diver course will give you the skills and knowledge
you need to safely dive inside a sunken vessel, aircraft
or similar structure.
You¡¯ll learn about safety, hazards and special risks
of overhead environments; gas management, entanglement,
limited visibility, deep diving, equipment, sources
of information, search methods, underwater navigation,
legal aspects, artifacts, treasure, salvage, archaeology
and appropriate material from other specialty courses
as well.
If you have NAUI Advanced Scuba Diver and NAUI Wreck
Diver (External Survey) certifications or the equivalent
thereof and are at least 18, get ready to explore!

The Trimix Diver Course consists of two levels, Trimix
Diver Level I and Trimix Diver Level II. These courses
will give you the skills and knowledge needed to minimize
the risks of utilizing helium-based Trimix breathing
gas mixes for dives to a maximum depth of 250 fsw /
76 msw requiring stage decompression and utilizing EANx
mixtures and/or oxygen during decompression.
Your Trimix Level I instructor will teach you to plan
and execute technical dives that require stage decompression
and utilize helium-based tri-mix breathing gas mixtures
and EANx and/or oxygen for stage decompression to depths
above 200 fsw / 61 msw. In your Tri-mix Level II course,
you will learn how to safely extend your diving depths
down to no greater than 250 fsw / 76 msw.
To enroll in either Trimix course, you must be certified
as a NAUI Decompression Techniques Diver and Technical
Helitrox Diver or equivalent, and have a minimum of
100 logged dives 20 of which must have been decompression
dives.

The Closed Circuit Rebreather course provides the
NAUI EANx certified diver with the training and experience
necessary to understand the hazards and minimize the
risks of using a closed circuit rebreather while breathing
Nitrox with a constant oxygen partial pressure.
This no-stop decompression course is designed to provide
you with the skills and knowledge needed to minimize
the risks of using Closed-circuit Underwater Breathing
Apparatus to a maximum depth of 100 fsw / 30 msw.
Closed-circuit Underwater Breathing Apparatus used
for NAUI certification and training must have been independently
tested for authorization of training on a specific model.

The Introduction to Technical Diving Course (Intro
to Tech) is designed as a bridge from the recreational
diver to an introduction to the rigors and discipline
of technical diving, and is a great preparatory course
if you are considering technical diver training or interested
in streamlining your equipment configuration.
Your NAUI Intro to Tech instructor will introduce you
to dive planning, physics and physiology, decompression,
and decompression associated with technical diving.
The NAUI Technical Equipment Configuration (NTEC) course
may also be available as part of your Intro to Tech
course or as a separate technical course.
The Intro to Tech course is your first step to a whole
new world of technical diving!

NAUI¡¯s Closed Circuit Mixed Gas Diver course will
to provide you with the skills and knowledge needed
to minimize the risks of utilizing helium-based or trimix
breathing diluent gas mixes for diving, with dive parameters
to a maximum depth of 250 fsw / 76 msw requiring decompression
with rebreathers and constant PO2.
Your training will include dive planning limits based
on gas consumption of bailout stages, oxygen exposures,
inert gas loading and breathing gas mixtures; navigation,
diver rescue and management of a diver experiencing
oxygen toxicity; ascents with ascent reel and lift bag;
and stage decompression.
The Closed Circuit Mixed Gas Diver course is an intensive
class that requires previous certifications in NAUI
Decompression Techniques, Heliair, and Closed Circuit
Rebreather (CCR) or the equivalents thereof, plus a
minimum of 100 logged hours on a Closed Circuit Rebreather,
60 hours of which are directly on the specific CCR for
mixed gas training.

If you want to prepare EANx breathing gas mixtures
for use by divers, sign up for the Mixed Gas Blender
and Oxygen Service Technician course. This is a great
course if you plan to work in a dive center and need
additional training, or wish to expand your knowledge
of diving gas mixtures.
In it, you¡¯ll gain the skills and knowledge needed
to safely handle high pressure gases and prepare Nitrox
breathing gas mixtures for use by divers. You¡¯ll analyze
the resulting breathing gas mixtures from your own breathing
gas blending practice and master the breathing gas blending
system used in training.

The Semi-closed Circuit Rebreather Diver course will
provide you with the skills and knowledge you need to
minimize the risks of using Semi-closed Circuit Rebreathers
(SCR) to a maximum depth of 100 fsw / 30 msw and while
using Nitrox mixtures of 32% to 80% oxygen.
Your training will include analyzation of breathing
gas mixtures; buoyancy control skills; scuba diver rescue
simulation to including management of a diver experiencing
underwater convulsions, hypoxia, flooded system, and
out of breathing gas scenarios; training in redundant
breathing gas systems; proper counter lung flush procedures;
and ascent with a line reel and lift bag while simulating
a required decompression stop. Additional topics covered
in your course include proper post dive procedures,
physics and physiology, equipment; review of dive tables
including RGBM tables, narcosis depth, dive planning
requirements and gas management planning.
Semi-closed Circuit Rebreathers used for NAUI certification
courses must have been independently tested before training
on a specific model can be authorized.

Combine technical diving and wreck exploration and
you get Technical Wreck Penetration divinga¢æ|This course
is to provide the diver with the skills and knowledge
needed to gain experience and minimize risks in penetration
wreck diving at depths beyond 130 fsw / 40 msw.
In this intensive and interesting course you¡¯ll learn
to plan and execute penetration wreck dives that require
stage decompression and utilize air and EANx and/or
oxygen for stage decompression, with dive plans less
than 165 fsw / 50 msw.
To enroll in the Technical Wreck Penetration Diver
course, you must be at least 18, have a minimum certification
as a Penetration Wreck Diver with at least 10 logged
penetration wreck dives, minimum 50 logged dives total,
and certification in Technical NAUI EANx and Decompression
Techniques. Your NAUI instructor may combine this course
with your Decompression Techniques Course.
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