One of the perceived differences between technical and other forms of recreational diving is the associated hazards, of which there are more associated with technical diving, and risk, which is often, but not always greater in technical diving. Hazards are the circumstances that may cause harm, and risk is the likelihood of the harm actually occurring. The hazards are partly due to the extended scope of technical diving, and partly associated with the equipment used. In some cases, the equipment used presents a secondary risk while mitigating a primary risk, such as the complexity of gas management needed to reduce the risk of a fatal gas supply failure, or the use of gases potentially unbreathable for some parts of a dive profile to reduce the risk of harm caused by oxygen toxicity, nitrogen narcosis or decompression sickness for the whole operation. Reduction of secondary risks may also affect equipment choice, but is largely skill-based. Training of technical divers includes procedures that are known from experience to be effective in handling the most common contingencies. Divers proficient in these emergency drills are less likely to be overwhelmed by the circumstances when things do not go according to plan, and are less likely to panic.
Depth Technical dives may be defined as being dives deeper than about or dives in an overhead environment with no direct access to the surface or natural light. Such environments may include fresh and saltwater caves and the interiors of shipwrecks. In many cases, technical dives also include planned decompression carried out over a number of stages during a controlled ascent to the surface at the end of the dive. The depth-based definition is based on risk caused by the progressive impairment of mental competence with the increasing partial pressure of respired nitrogen. Breathing
air under pressure causes
nitrogen narcosis that usually starts to become a problem at depths of or greater, but this differs between divers. Increased depth also increases the
partial pressure of oxygen and so increases the risk of oxygen toxicity. Technical diving often includes the use of breathing mixtures other than air to reduce these risks, and the additional complexity of managing a variety of breathing mixtures introduces other risks and is managed by equipment configuration and procedural training. To reduce
nitrogen narcosis, it is common to use
trimix which uses helium to replace some of the nitrogen in the diver's breathing mixture, or
heliox, in which there is no nitrogen.
Inability to ascend directly Technical dives may alternatively be defined as dives where the diver cannot safely ascend directly to the surface either due to a mandatory
decompression stop or a physical ceiling. This form of diving implies a much greater reliance on the redundancy of critical life support equipment and procedural training since the diver must stay underwater until it is safe to ascend or the diver has successfully exited the overhead environment.
Decompression stops A diver at the end of a long or deep dive may need to do
decompression stops or remain below a
decompression ceiling to avoid
decompression sickness, also known as "the bends". Metabolically inert gases in the diver's breathing gas, such as
nitrogen and
helium, are absorbed into body tissues when breathed under high pressure, mainly during the deep phase of the dive. These dissolved gases must be released slowly from the body
tissues by controlling the ascent rate to restrict the formation and growth of bubbles. This is usually done by pausing or "doing stops" at various depths during the ascent to the surface. Most technical divers breathe
oxygen enriched
breathing gas mixtures such as
nitrox and pure oxygen during long-duration decompression, as this increases the rate of inert gas elimination. Elimination of inert gases continues during the surface intervals (time spent on the surface between dives), which must be considered when planning subsequent dives. A decompression obligation is also referred to as a "soft", or "physiological" ceiling.
Physical ceiling These types of physical overhead, or "hard" or "environmental" ceiling can prevent the diver from surfacing directly: •
Cave diving – diving into a cave system. •
Ice diving – diving under ice. •
Wreck diving – diving inside a shipwreck. • Diving under any other form of overhead physical obstruction to a direct ascent to the free surface, such as under the hull of a ship or under a harbour or offshore structure or a net. In all of these situations, a
guide line or from the exit to the diver is the standard method of reducing the risk of being unable to find the way out. A lifeline fixed to the diver is more reliable as it is not easy to lose, and is often used when diving under ice, where the line is unlikely to snag and the distance is reasonably short, and can be tended by a person at the surface. Static guidelines are more suitable when a lifeline is likely to snag on the environment or on other divers in the group, and may be left
in situ to be used for other dives, or recovered on the way out by winding back onto the reel. Guidelines may be very much longer than lifelines, and may be branched and marked. They are used as standard practice for cave diving and wreck penetration.
Extremely limited visibility Technical dives in waters where the diver's vision is severely impeded by low-visibility conditions, caused by turbidity or
silt out and low light conditions due to depth or enclosure, require greater competence. The combination of low visibility and strong current can make dives in these conditions extremely hazardous, particularly in an overhead environment, and greater skill and reliable and familiar equipment are needed to manage this risk. Limited visibility diving can cause disorientation, potentially leading to loss of sense of direction, loss of effective buoyancy control, etc. Divers in extremely limited visibility situations depend on their instruments such as
dive lights, pressure gauges, compass,
depth gauge, bottom timer, dive computer, etc., and guidelines for orientation and information. Training for cave and wreck diving includes techniques for managing extreme low visibility, as finding the way out of an overhead environment before running out of gas is a safety-critical skill. ==Equipment==