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EUROTEK.2010 Report ...Images
by Gareth Lock
EuroTek.2010
Delivers
The Advanced Diving Conference
& equipment Exhibition
Held on the Oct
16th & 17th at International Convention Centre, Central
Birmingham, England

The 2nd Eurotek Advanced Diving Conference
was held on Oct 16-17 in Birmingham, England and was been hailed
by delegates that attended as one of the best dive conferences
they had ever been to.
With four large conference rooms offering concurrent sessions
and a significant representation of manufacturers and displays,
there was far more information and eye candy than could be absorbed
in the short weekend.
Diving events on the calendar don’t get any better than
EUROTEK (see
feedback) which has quickly earned an unrivalled
reputation as THE place where Advanced Divers from all over
the world gather to advance their knowledge and understanding
of technical diving. A place to talk to manufacturers of technical
diving equipment that you wont see anywhere else other than
Eurotek. The place to listen to what the experts have to say
and learn from the biggest wealth of knowledge gathered in one
place at any one time.
Cave explorer Jill Heinerth told Eurotek “In my view,
the conference was incredibly polished and professional while
offering numerous opportunities for informal discussions between
divers, medical experts, engineers, manufacturers and pioneers.
The speaker list was an international A-list and attendees hailed
from over seventeen countries by my count.”
IANTD founder Tom Mount quoted
“The best dive show I have ever been to”!
EUROTEK.2010 - ‘the bi-annual Advanced and Technical Diving
Conference’ - was held on Saturday 16th and Sunday 17th
October 2010 at the International Convention Centre, Birmingham,
England. |
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This year saw 500 delegates travel from 18 different
countries to attend EUROTEK.2010. Over the two days 35 leading
diving experts delivered 45 different Seminars, Workshops and
Presentations covering recent expeditions, wrecks and diving
in mines and caves.
Technical topics included in-water recompression, CO2 issues,
modern decompression advancements and accident analysis. In
addition Rich Stevenson chaired a Rebreather Panel where delegates
were able to discuss and get their questions constructively
answered by leading manufacturers in a candid open forum. |
| EUROTEK.2010 was kicked off by organiser Leigh Bishop who
delivered a poignant and brutally honest presentation about
the events that led up to the death of EUROTEK Co-founder Carl
Spencer. Carl lost his life in May 2009 whilst filming a National
Geographic programme on HMHS Britannic. Illustrated by stills
and footage of the incident Bishop explained what went wrong
and the hard lessons that were learnt from this tragic accident.
The emphasis of this presentation was to hammer home the harsh
lessons learnt and to hopefully save lives thus preventing this
incident occurring again. |
American Evan Kovacs had travelled to Eurotek and made history
by projecting on a huge screen some of his recent underwater
work in 3D.
Having never been attempted at a dive show of this kind before,
delegates enjoyed some stunning 3D material including images
of Titanic shot only two weeks before the conference. |
Professor Simon Mitchell talks with delegates |
| Co2 monitoring issues were a key topic of the Conference and
Austrian speaker Arne Sieber showed delegates a glimpse of the
future with some very interesting developments in cell technology.
Briefly Sieber has built a tiny CO2 monitoring system with two
monitors (encapsulated in ceramic) approximately the same size
as a rubber on the end of a pencil. These are neatly fitted
into the mouthpiece of a CCR and the CO2 is monitored by electronics
housed in a box about half the depth of a matchbox, mounted
on the exterior of a Rebreather Bail Out Valve. Currently this
system looks to be a distinct reality within half a decade with
one industry expert of note enthusiastically commenting that
this was how he felt 30 years ago when he was pushing the frontiers
of biomedical electronics. |
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