Nautilus Lifeline Driver



Nautilus Wholesale Diving Supplier Nautilus supplies diving products into the UK, Ireland, Europe and other countries such as Iceland and Norway which are also in our economic area. We now supply over 20 brands through our network of over 100 retailers.

  • Nautilus Lifeline Inventor, Captain Mike Lever of Nautilus Liveaboards, states “we have been running dive charters for over 25 years in some pretty rugged places from Alaska to Socorro Island and beyond as far as Clipperton Atoll. We designed the Nautilus LifeLine with the idea of keeping our clients safe.
  • Summary of Contents for Nautilus Lifeline DIVER 6.5 Page 1 QUICK START GUIDE for Nautilus Lifeline DIVER: 6.5 Fully Charge your Lifeline Unit IMPORTANT! Lifeline must be fully charged to 100% before first use. Battery indicator is not accurate until unit has been fully charged.

Since scuba diving and snorkeling has become popular with tourists, boats have lost track of divers time and again. Divers depend on boats and their crews for access to offshore dive sites, but often, they willingly entrust their lives to operators whose attitude to safety may not stand up to scrutiny.

Lookingfor a lost diver is like “looking for somebody’s head which is the size of acabbage. You’d be hard pushed to see that on a motorway a third of a mileaway, let alone in a seaway”. http://archive.divernet.com/training-general/p301939-missing.html

For20 years I worried about losing divers that I was responsible for. I can’t begin to count how many thousands of hours I spent bobbing aroundin a skiff in the cold and current swept waters of British Columbia and Alaska,watching bubbles, tracking divers and hoping the current wouldn’t fill in toofast after the change in tide and sweep my divers off to sea. It’s a bigconcern when current often fills in at 5 – 10 mph after slack. The biggest current I ever dealt with was at Nakwakto Rapids with amaximum dive time of 14 minutes on slack and a current that could pick up to 20mph. Impressive as h*ll. And scary as h*ll for me as theskiff driver!!

Itried all sorts of home grown solutions to finding lost divers from issuing CDsto divers (this was in the days before DVDs and well before USB sticks!)to using CO2 cartridges and balloons. I had hoped that the CDs might besomewhat radar reflective and make it easier to find divers with the radar onour dive skiff if guests held them up in the air perpendicular to the directionof the skiff. Unfortunately this idea was a complete failure!. My dream with the CO2 cartridges was that a lost diver could inflate asmall metallic balloon and float the balloon skyward on a reel. This idea didn’t work so well either…

My “ahah” moment was 11 years ago when I lost a diver off Wooden Island up in Alaska. I found him drifting offshore after a very tense 45 minutes of searching. He was calm. We were all completely freaked out, stressed and in tears. We thought we had lost him. The thing was that he could see us searching for him, so he wasn’t worried. FRIGGIN BRAINSTORM!!!!!! What if a lost diver could call his dive boat for help? WAIT WAIT! Take this further. What if the diver had a depth rated waterproof radio that he could use to call any boat on the world wide universal marine channel 16? Wouldn’t matter if he was in the Solomon Islands, Socorro or Alaska. Channel 16 is the standby universal channel everywhere. WAIT, THERE’S MORE. What if we incorporated a GPS with digital selective calling capability into the radio for both position fixing and automated alarms on all modern radios?

Anotherbig idea I had was that if a diver was lost, they could inflate a smallmetallic balloon using a CO2 cartridge. The balloon would float skyward on areel. Unfortunately, that didn’t work either.

Well actually I’m getting ahead of myself. The very first beta unit was a marine radio in a ziplock bag. That morphed into a marine radio in a big clumsy plastic container. GPS and DSC and eventually AIS technology came later in the design process after a year of hard and very expensive slogging in Vancouver crunching software and firmware and working with mechanical, electrical and RF engineers. We were very excited to beta test the finished Gen 1. And devastated to turn it on and reach a maximum transmission range of about 10 feet. No, not a misprint. 10 feet. But we kept going and going and burning huge amounts of capital until we finally had a unit that worked properly.

Fast forward to 2020 and here we are with a sleek, durable and reliable gen 2 unit with a proven range of up to 54 km and tough enough that you can drive over it with a truck. 50,000 units sold and more than 60 divers who have told us that we saved their life. I couldn’t be prouder of our baby. The stress and pain and nearly going broke bringing the LifeLine to market has faded from memory. I just want every single diver to never dive without a LifeLine. LifeLine; we save lives!! Available in all the best dive stores!

CaptainMike

Founder Nautilus

And proud inventor of the Nautilus LifeLine

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Nautilus Lifeline Driver Reviews

Any crew standout?
Th crew was amazing in every way. Time to make sure we all were happy and attended to all the times. The chef's meals were delicious... not a bad meal was swrved and I had a gluten intolence ... very accomodating and always courtious of my needs. Special desserts just for me every day! They made me feel very special and not put out by the extra work!! Dive masters were very attentive also handling our needs to the fullest extent. I neeeded to put my gear on in the boat and they were happy to assit. They took us to the dive sites with enthusiam and always were able to show us the highlights of the dive. We saw everything the trip promoted to see. Mantas, whale shark, hammer heads, galopogos sharks even a tiger shark or two. And let's not forget the smaller things like peacock flounders, octapus, eels, rays and schools of fish. Dolphins visited us on several dives and I had the most exciting dives that I can remember ever in my 26 years of diving. This was my 5th live aboard trip and with all the memorable dives, it will not be my last. The Nautilus dive experince is top of the class. Thank you for a wonderful dive trip! Special thanks goes to Jan Vasquez and the kitchen crew!!! The entire crew were amazing and all was better then I expected. It's always a nice feeling to have a trip exceed your expections... Bravo team Nautilus!! I'm sure we will see you in the future... Thank you!! Jill