For scuba, a "bailout bottle" or "self-contained ascent bottle" is a small
diving cylinder meant to be used as an
alternate air source to allow a controlled ascent with any required decompression, in place of a
controlled emergency swimming ascent, which will not allow required decompression. A bailout cylinder is required equipment for a professional diver using scuba in some circumstances.
Types A
pony bottle is an example of a small bailout cylinder which has a standard
diving regulator with first and second stages. There are also significantly smaller cylinders which have the first stage — and in the smallest models also the second stage — integrated into the cylinder valve itself. A well-known example of this class of bailout bottle is the "Spare Air" set, which can supply a few breaths to allow the diver to ascend at a safe rate, but not enough to do a decompression stop. This type of bailout bottle is typically carried in a holster that is attached to the diver's harness. "Spare Air" bailout bottles, introduced in the 1980s, are very small cylinders with integral scuba regulators. Their disadvantage is that in many emergency situations they do not have sufficient capacity to get a diver back to the surface safely, and thus may cause divers carrying them to feel an unjustified sense of safety. Their advantage is that they are compact and easy to deploy, and that a small amount of air is better than none in an emergency.
Capacity A review carried out by
Scuba Diving magazine attempted to give a sense of from what depth bailout bottles of various
capacities could get divers to the surface under maximum safe ascent rates, though the review cautioned that the reviewers were in controlled conditions and thus could not replicate the circumstances of an actual panicked diver. The review found that a 1.7-cubic-foot (0.24 L) bottle had sufficient air to get the reviewing diver from to the surface; a 3-cubic-foot (0.4 L) bottle from a depth of ; and a 6-cubic-foot (0.8 L) bottle from the maximum reviewed depth of , which is the maximum depth recommended for recreational dives by some training agencies. A bell diver must be able to return to the bell on the contents of the bailout cylinder, which will be influenced by the depth and umbilical length, and limited by the size of the bell entry lock manway.
Mounting arrangements A bailout cylinder is defined by its function, and may be carried in any convenient way. The small "Spare Air" type is commonly carried in a pocket type holster which is strapped to the harness where it can easily be reached, usually somewhere on the front of a jacket style buoyancy compensator. Larger bailout cylinders may be strapped to the back cylinder, (see
Pony bottle), or suspended from the harness D-rings along the side of the diver as a
side-mount, or sling cylinder. Surface-supplied divers usually carry the bailout set on a back-mount harness, as this leaves the arms unencumbered for work. ==Bailout systems used with rebreathers==