翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Joseph Sadi-Lecointe
・ Joseph Sadler
・ Joseph Sadoc Alemany
・ Joseph Safra
・ Joseph Said
・ Joseph Saidu Momoh
・ Joseph Saint-Rémy
・ Joseph Sakunoshin Motoda
・ Joseph Saladino
・ Joseph Salamé
・ Joseph Salang Gandum
・ Joseph Salas
・ Joseph Salazar
・ Joseph Salemi
・ Joseph Salerno
Joseph Salim Peress
・ Joseph Salmon
・ Joseph Salter
・ Joseph Saltis
・ Joseph Salvador
・ Joseph Salvador (scholar)
・ Joseph Salvador Marino
・ Joseph Salway
・ Joseph Salzmann
・ Joseph Sam Perry
・ Joseph Samachson
・ Joseph Sambrook
・ Joseph Sampson
・ Joseph Samson (Lower Canada politician)
・ Joseph Samuel


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Joseph Salim Peress : ウィキペディア英語版
Joseph Salim Peress

Joseph Salim Peress (1896 – June 4, 1978), was a pioneering British diving engineer, inventor of one of the first truly usable atmospheric diving suits, the ''Tritonia'', and was involved in the construction of the famous JIM suit.
Salim Peress grew up in the Middle East. It is said that his interest in diving suit design started from the observations of the Persian Gulf pearl divers.〔
, reprinted, slightly abbreviated as:
. The entire issue is also available (as PDF ).〕〔(Remarkable diving suit ), SMH, 1930-12-02〕
Peress had a natural talent for engineering design, and had challenged himself to construct an articulated atmospheric diving suit (ADS) that would keep divers dry and at atmospheric pressure, even at great depth. At the time, little was known about decompression diving. Various atmospheric suits had been developed during the Victorian era, but nobody had yet managed to overcome the basic design problem of constructing a joint which would remain flexible and watertight at depth without seizing up under pressure.
In 1918 Peress began working for WG Tarrant at Byfleet, United Kingdom, where he was given the space and tools to develop his ideas about constructing an ADS. His first attempt was an immensely complex prototype machined from solid stainless steel.
In 1923 Peress was asked to design a suit for salvage work on the wreck of the P&O liner SS ''Egypt'' which had sunk in of water off Ushant. He declined, on the grounds that his prototype suit was too heavy for a diver to handle easily, but was encouraged by the request to begin work on a new suit using lighter materials. By 1929 he believed he had solved the weight problem, by using cast magnesium instead of steel, and had also managed to improve the design of the suit's joints by using a trapped cushion of oil to keep the surfaces moving smoothly.
〔Patent no. 1,402,645, "Flexible joint for diving dresses", applied for April 30, 1921. In:

The oil, which was virtually non-compressible and readily displaceable, allowed the limb joints to move freely at depths of , where the pressure was . Peress claimed that the Tritonia suit's joints could function at although this was never proven.
In 1930 Peress revealed the Tritonia suit. By May it had completed trials and was publicly demonstrated in a tank at Byfleet. In September Peress' assistant Jim Jarret dived in the suit to a depth of in Loch Ness. The suit performed perfectly, the joints proving resistant to pressure and moving freely even at depth.
The suit was offered to the Royal Navy which turned it down, stating that Navy divers never needed to descend below .
Jim Jarret made a deep dive to on the wreck of the RMS Lusitania off south Ireland, followed by a shallower dive to in the English Channel in 1937 after which, due to lack of interest, the Tritonia suit was retired. Peress abandoned work on diving suits and instead turned to pioneering work in plastic moulding, later forming a company which became the world's largest manufacturer of gas turbine blades for the aircraft industry.〔
In 1965,〔 Peress came back from retirement, starting his collaboration with two British engineers, Mike Humphrey and Mike Borrow, interested in designing a modern atmospheric diving suit. The first order of business was finding the original Tritonia suit, which turned up in a Glasgow warehouse. After all these years, the old suit was still in working conditions, and the octogenarian Peress became the first person to test it in a factory test tank.〔 In 1969 Peress became a consultant to UMEL (Underwater Marine Equipment Limited), the new company formed by Humphrey and Borrow,
which eventually created the JIM suit, which was named after Peress' diver Jim Jarret.
==Notes and references==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Joseph Salim Peress」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.