Posts Tagged ‘Diving Suit’

1933 – Submarine Salvage Apparatus – Eugene J. Romano (American)

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1933 – Submarine Salvage Apparatus by Eugene J. Romano.

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For a demonstration of the robot to be used on this expedition, Lieutenant Harry E. rieseberg tackles the device in true diver's fashion. There is no dignity in entering or leaving the robot.

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Harry E. Rieseberg

Extract from HE WALKS WITH  DAVEY JONES by Eric Strutt
Source: The Lincoln Star, 28 December, 1941

 WHILE Lieutenant Rieseberg had been off adventuring, Eugene Romano, an inventor living in Seattle, Wash., had been perfecting a steel diving robot capable of withstanding ocean pressure to a depth of 5000 feet. Two toggle-jointed, electrically operated arms extend from the upper half of the robot, terminating in pincer-like claws delicate enough to pick up a single coin, yet strong enough to exert a pressure of 5000 pounds, and flexible enough to tie a knot in a cable.
  Lieutenant Rieseberg received permission to test this Romano robot; and with Captain Loesche as sailing master of the magnificent four-masted schooner Constellation he set out for Manta Bay, Peru, where he hoped to find the wreck of the Santa Cruz, a victim of treacherous reefs during the 17th century. The ancient manuscript that told of the wreck stated there was a curse on the treasure.
 A MAN can't let century-old curses a interfere with his business. Arriving at Manta Bay, Rieseberg explored the ocean floor in the goggle-eyed robot until he found the ship.
 A few yards away, in an observation bell, "Spik" Gomez, an assistant, was taking pictures of the diving bell in action. Suddenly out of a dark sea ravine a huge octopus slid between the divers and wrapped its tremendous tentacles around the observation bell, shaking it with' such force that Gomez was knocked unconscious.
 Lieutenant Rieseberg set his movie camera going and moved in to the rescue. Using the robot's powerful pincer claws, he hacked at the encircling arms of the Manta Bay monster until he had killed it.
 A little later Rieseberg and another diver went down below in regular suits to take pictures and measurements of the great octopus. It measured 24 feet from tip to tip—the largest octopus ever filmed.
 The next time Rieseberg submerged he uncovered a crude iron chest that yielded up 400.000 corroded and blackened discs of metal, later valued at approximately $40,000.
 A FEW minor, and usually successful, cruises served as a prelude to another try for the Silver Shoals treasure which had now become ale most an obsession with Rieseberg.
 He made a number of exploratory descents in the Romano robot at Silver Shoals until he located an ancient galleon which appeared to be one of the fabulous fleet he sought.
 The following day, in the face of an approaching storm, he went over the side. He reached the wreck, which was perched on a rocky outcrop about 50 fathoms deep. He started working around the hulk, when a violent rocking motion of the robot sent it rolling over the rock shelf and straight down.
 "I shouted through the telephone, but I got no answer," Rieseberg told me. "Finally the robot came to an abrupt halt, and Captain Loesche's voice came through the headphones. A gale had struck the ship and the cable controlling the robot had slipped sending me down 234 fathoms—deeper than anyone had ever gone in a workable robot before.

Note: RH 2015 – Riesenberg is known to have stretched that facts at lot to make an interesting story. The octopus mentioned above was later revealed to be a prop to the movie he was making at the time.


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SOON to be used in a search for sunken treasure, a new salvaging system recently was demonstrated at Washington, D. C. When a sunken vessel holding bullion is located, four cables anchor the salvage ship. Auxiliary cables then lower a one-man diving sphere and move it to any part of the wreck. The diver attaches salvage buoys or pontoons to the vessel, which is ultimately raised to the surface by pumping air into the buoys. Oxygen and air-purifying apparatus within the sphere enables the diver to stay submerged for sixteen hours. The steel ball is strong enough to withstand sea pressure at a 2,500-foot depth, and has movable six-foot arms to which twelve different implements may be attached and manipulated with amazing dexterity. With them, the diver can lift half-ton weights, tie knots in inch-and-a-half steel cable, and drill three-inch holes through ship plates. To demonstrate still more convincingly the maneuverability of the arms, a skilled operator recently performed the stunt of playing bridge, readily picking up and laying down the cards with the versatile "hands."

Source: Popular Science, August 1935.


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ONCE more the world's richest treasure chest, Davy Jones' locker, is about to be invaded, this time by a weird, iron-clawed diving bell, the product of Eugene J. Romano's imagination and mechanical genius.
The Romano undersea robot, recognized by many authorities as one of the greatest advancements in deep sea operation history, has a pear-shaped shell capable of withstanding water pressure at depths of 5,000 feet. It has two arms nine feet long, strong enough to lift half a ton, and yet adjustable enough to pick up a small coin. There are powerful lights that can pierce the water for a hundred feet.  
Oxygen for the operator is supplied by an apparatus inside the sphere working in conjunction with an air purifier. Unlike divers who plumb the depths in diving helmet and suit, the operator of the robot works under normal pressure regardless of the depth.
In salvaging sunken treasure, the robot will be hoisted over the side of the salvage vessel Constellation, and a mile long cable will lower it to the bottom. There the operator will guide the ship's movements by telephone until the sunken treasure ship is located.
A Romano salvage buoy, capable of raising 100 tons, will be lowered. This buoy permits the water to flow through it, thus equalizing the pressure. The operator, manipulating the hydro-pneumatic arms of the robot, will then rig the buoy in place. Pumped-in air will replace the water in the buoy and raise the boat.              

Source: Mechanix Illustrated Magazine, September, 1935 


Romano's Patents:

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Maneuvering means for underwater salvage equipment

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Publication number    US2004133 A
Publication type    Grant
Publication date    Jun 11, 1935
Filing date    Mar 27, 1933
Priority date    Mar 27, 1933
Inventors    Romano Eugene J
Original Assignee    Romano Eugene J

 Claims.

My present invention relates to the art of marine salvage equipment and more particularly to maneuvering means for under water salvage equipment.

The principal object of my present invention is the provision of maneuvering means which permit the exact placement of a diving bell even though it may be far beneath the surface of the water.

A further object of my invention is to provide means whereby, after the bell has been placed in its desired position, it may be revolved so that any arms or ports may face in the most desired direction.


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Underwater salvage device

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Publication number    US2040956 A
Publication type    Grant
Publication date    May 19, 1936
Filing date    Mar 27, 1933
Priority date    Mar 27, 1933
Inventors    Lula Romano
Original Assignee    Lula Romano

My present invention relates to the art of underwater salvaging and more particularly to an underwater salvage device.

The great wealth represented in sunken boats and the like in the ocean, at greater depths than the ordinary diver can descend, has prompted the development of many devices to aid in underwater salvage. My device is of this general class. It is characterized however by being so arranged in that an operator can descend hundreds of feet below the surface of the water and by means of control arrangements manipulate two or more arms in a manner which makes it possible to execute any maneuver that could normally be done by the two arms of an individual. The method of supporting and maneuvering my salvage device has been gone into in some detail in my co-pending application entitled "Maneuvering means for underwater salvage equipment 20 Serial Number 663,030 filed March 27, 1933 has all the characteristics of the various diving bells which have been designed and constructed to permit an observer descending to great depths to assist in directing salvage operations, and in addition is provided with the mechanical arms which because of their unusual construction have proven to be of great value.

The principal object of my present invention is therefore to provide means in addition to a diving arrangement whereby salvage operations can actually be conducted by the observer.

A further object is the provision of means whereby the mechanical arms of my diving device can be operated in the same manner as the arms of an individual.

A further object is the provision of means whereby the power applied to the arms of my device can be so increased that the device can be used to handle the heavy cables and chains, lift heavy objects and the like which marine salvage requires.


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Submarine salvage apparatus

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Publication number    US2061256 A
Publication type    Grant
Publication date    Nov 17, 1936
Filing date    Jan 16, 1935
Priority date    Jan 16, 1935
Inventors    Romano Eugene J
Original Assignee    Romano Eugene J

 My present invention relates to improvements in submarine salvaging apparatus and particularly to the operating mechanism and control means of the duplex grappling arms forming part of the apparatus or equipment. The submarine equipment includes a diving bell in which the operator is stationed, and by the utilization of the operating mechanism and control devices of my invention the exterior, flexible, grappling arms are manipulated from the interior of the shell or diving bell, in order to swing the two arms in parallel planes with relation to the bell; to flex the arms; and to revolve one section of each of the flexible arms on its longitudinal axis. A pair of grappling jaws are mounted at the free ends of each of the grappling arms, and operating means for these jaws are also controlled from the interior of the diving bell by the operator.

By the employment of both his hands and feet, the operator is enabled to manipulate the two grappling devices and co-ordinate their functions in such facile manner as to assure eflicient and rapid movements in salvaging operations while under water. ….


Interesting that the current field of aerial camera systems, including CableCam® and Spidercam®, amongst others,  use the same basic technique that Romano patented back in 1933.

The patent for  Cablecam: System and method for moving objects within three-dimensional space

Publication number    US6809495 B2
Publication date    Oct 26, 2004
Filing date    Jul 28, 2003
Inventor    Jim Rodnunsky


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Neslé chocolate sticker card from Belgium.


See other early Underwater Robots here.


1931 – Mobile Submarine Diving Bell – Carl H. Wiley, Elbert H. Wiley (American)

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1931 – Mobile Submarine Diving Bell by Carl H. Wiley, Elbert H. Wiley

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3D Video by Charles Daigneault.

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Three million dollars in nuggets of gold! This is the lure that set a small band of adventurers sailing from Seattle, Wash., a few weeks ago. It lies under the hold of the ill-fated S. S. Islander, sunk in collision with an iceberg off Juneau, Alaska, thirty years ago. Now the Curtis-Wiley expedition is going down 365 feet after it with a new type of diving suit – a veritable one-man submarine of steel. This device's lazy-tongs arm will grasp valuable objects and attach cables to the wreck so that the salvage ship Griffon's forty powerful winches can attempt to raise it entire. Source: Popular Science, September 1931.

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Source: Popular Mechanix, August 1933.

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Source: Popular Mechanics, October 1931.

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Source: Popular Science, September 1931.


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Mechanical arm and hand

Publication number    US1979782 A
Publication type    Grant
Publication date    Nov 6, 1934
Filing date    Dec 16, 1931
Priority date    Dec 16, 1931
Inventors    Carl Haven Wiley, Elbert Houston Wiley
Original Assignee    Curtis-Wiley Marine Salvors

Our invention relates to a mechanical arm and hand and the general object of our invention is to provide an efficient arm and hand which is especially adapted for use on a diving bell.

Diving bells are essentially subjected to very high water pressures and mechanical arms, which necessarily function on the exterior of said bells, and are operated from the interior thereof, must be capable of withstanding this high pressure and must be freely and easily operable from within the bell without permitting any leakage of water into the bell.

It is a primary object of our invention to provide a mechanical arm of this nature having substantially all of the movements of the human arm and hand and having reliable and efficient means which are easily and speedily actuated and controlled from within the bell for imparting the several movements to the arm and hand.

Other primary objects of our invention are to provide a mechanical arm having universal pivotal movement within a. limited range at the shoulder, and having pivotal movement in one plane at the elbow and having clamping jaws at the location of the hand which simulate the action of the fingers, together with means for imparting the several desired movements to the various parts and locking means for holding the fingers in engagement with an object while the arm is being moved.

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See other early Underwater Robots here.


1930 – Diving Apparatus – Emil Kulik (American)

Submersible

An Armored Sea-Monster
This machine is not really a sea-monster, but the newest thing in diving 'bells', although in this case the operation and construction resembles a miniature submarine. It was invented by Emil Kulik, 52-year-old former sea captain and naval officer, Brooklyn, N.Y. It is plentifully supplied with windows, the driver sitting within and operating the electric motors which drives it at two miles a minute. In front are the two robot arms operated from the inside. Compressed air chambers allow  the submersible to be raised or lowered to any depth, remaining stationery at that depth. Kulik intends to try it out. March 1932.

1930 – Diving Apparatus by Emil Kulik

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Motorized Diving Chamber to Seek Sea Bottom Treasure – Source: Modern Mechanix, December 1931

WITH so much sunken treasure lying around loose and unclaimed on the bottom of the sea, inventors have been stimulated to devise diving contraptions to explore ocean depths on treasure hunting expeditions. The latest diving machine to make its appearance resembles a fantastic sea beast, so strangely is it constructed. Protected with armor plate and thick glass observation ports, the chamber shown in the accompanying photo can descend to a depth of about 350 feet and stay there for as long as seven hours. Communication with mother ship is maintained through telephone equipment. The chamber roams under power of its twin screws.

Submarine for ship recovery, America, Photograph, August 29th 1931

The Inventor Emil Kulik And His Deep-Sea Rescue Apparatus. Patent Exhibition At The Grand Palace / New York. About 1930. Photograph.


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Diving apparatus

Publication number    US1854906 A
Publication type    Grant
Publication date    Apr 19, 1932
Filing date    Oct 23, 1930
Priority date    Oct 23, 1930
Inventors    Emil Kulik
Original Assignee    Emil Kulik

This invention relates to diving apparatus and is directed more particularly to improvements in devices analogous to diving bells. The invention is especially directed to an apparatus which maybe lowered overboard from a salvage ship and while attached thereto by cables, chains or the like may be submerged to relatively great depths. The apparatus is such that the interior thereof is provided with a plurality of compartments through the provision of appropriate bulkheads and in these several compartments are positioned devices for controlling the buoyancy of the devices propelling mechanism whereby it may be self propelled and apparatus whereby one or more persons safely housed within the apparatus may direct its operations of undersea salvaging. It is well recognized that divers clothed in even the most modern diving suits cannot descend to any appreciable depth, whereas the device of this invention is so constructed that it can be readily made to withstand pressures at almost any depth.
An important practical feature of the present invention consists in mechanism operable from within the operator's compartment and extending to the exterior of the hull of the apparatus for efficiently carrying on  salvaging operations. This means may be graphically referred to as a pair of mechanical hands supported on appropriate arms and so constructed that the operator within his compartment can move the hands and arms in all directions and can manually so coordinate their operations as to accomplish through such mechanical hands everything that can be accomplished by a diver but with even greater power and more efficiency. The said mechanical hand arrangement forms an important part of this invention ….


See other early Underwater Robots here.


1920 – Submarine Salvage Vessel – John C. Setlow (American)

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1920 – Submarine Salvage Vessel by John C. Setlow

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Submarine salvage vessel

Publication number    US1450232 A
Publication type    Grant
Publication date    Apr 3, 1923
Filing date    Mar 6, 1920
Priority date    Mar 6, 1920
Inventors    Setlow John C
Original Assignee    Setlow John C

Description

In the usual type of submarine salvage vessels, the salvage or wrecking tools are mounted on the exterior of the vessel and are operated from the interior of the vessel. It has therefore been necessary to lead the operating shafts, rods or similar mechanisms for driving and controlling the tools, through stuffing boxes, ball and socket joints or the like provided in the shell of the vessel. Consequently the depth to which salvage vessels have been operated has been limited to comparatively shallow water since the pressure of the water at great depths is sufficient to cause leakage at any point where a working joint is provided between the interior and exterior of the shell regardless of packing measures which may be taken to prevent such leakage.

Therefore it is one of the objects of my invention to increase the working depth of salvage vessels by dispensing with working joints in the side of such vessels by the positioning of electric motors, constituting the operating or driving means for the salvage tools, on the outside of the vessel, and by the positioning of the controlling means consisting of switches, within the vessels. Said controlling means and operating means are connected by electricity conductors, mainly in the form of wires, said conductors at point of entry into the vessel being of novel construction which will preclude the leakage of water into the vessel at this point.

It is a further object of the invention to provide a salvage vessel wherein the salvage tools are of such a character as will enable the operator to perform comparatively intricate tasks with comparative ease. …..


See other early Underwater Robots here.


1919 – Deep-sea Salvage Apparatus – Alfred E. Lemon (American)

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1919 – Deep-sea Salvage Apparatus by Alfred E. Lemon.

Deep-sea salvage apparatus

Publication number    US1415661 A
Publication type    Grant
Publication date    May 9, 1922
Filing date    Dec 30, 1919
Priority date    Dec 30, 1919
Inventors    Lemon Alfred E
Original Assignee    Lemon Alfred E

The object of the invention is to provide a new and improved deep-sea salvage apparatus, more especially designed for doing salvage and similar work on sunken vessels or other parts located at great depth.

Another object is to permit of maintaining a practically normal air pressure within the apparatus irrespective of the depth it is in at the time, thus enabling the occupant or occupants to work without danger of being subjected to high air pressures so detrimental to health.

Another object is to permit of lowering the apparatus to the desired depth from a mother ship or raising it to the surface with out loss of valuable time.

Another object is to enable the occupant to fasten grappling or similar devices to a sunken vessel or other object with a view to raise the same or perform other desired work.

Another object is to permit of running the apparatus along the sea bottom for locating a sunken vessel or for exploration or other purposes.


See other early Underwater Robots here.