(1) General.
(a) All employers shall comply with the
following requirements, unless otherwise specified.
(b) Each equipment modification, repair,
test, calibration or maintenance service shall be recorded by means of a
tagging or logging system, and include the date and nature of work performed,
and the name or initials of the person performing the work.
(2) Air compressor system.
(a) Compressors used to supply air to the
diver shall be equipped with a volume tank with a check valve on the inlet
side, a pressure gauge, a relief valve, and a drain valve.
(b) A compressor shall be constructed and
situated so as to avoid entry of contaminated air into the air-supply system
and shall be equipped with a suitable in-line particulate filter followed by a
bed of activated charcoal and, if necessary, a moisture absorber to further
assure breathing air quality. These filters should be placed before any
receiver and after the discharge in the compressor. If an oil-lubricated
compressor is used, it shall be equipped with a carbon monoxide alarm or an
equally as effective alternative if approved by the department.
(i) If a carbon monoxide alarm is used, it
shall be calibrated to activate at or below 10 parts per million carbon
monoxide at least once per month. A calibration and maintenance log shall be
kept and shall be available for review and copying by the director or his or
her designee. The log shall identify the test method, date, time of test,
results, and the name of the person performing the test. The log shall be
retained for at least one year from the date of the test.
(ii) If the use of an alarm at the compressor
will not effectively provide warning to the diver or tender of a carbon
monoxide problem, a remote alarm or other means of warning the wearer shall be
used.
(iii) Breathing air couplings
shall be incompatible with outlets for nonrespirable plant air or other gas
systems to prevent inadvertent servicing of air-line breathing apparatus with
nonrespirable gases.
(c)
Respirable air supplied to a diver shall not contain:
(i) A level of carbon monoxide (CO) greater
than 10 ppm;
(ii) A level of carbon
dioxide (CO2) greater than 1,000 ppm;
(iii) A level of oil mist greater than 5
milligrams per cubic meter; or
(iv)
A noxious or pronounced odor.
(d) Compressor systems providing surface air
to divers must have a low pressure warning device installed at the air
purification system inlet to alert dive tenders of low air pressure.
The minimum alarm setting shall be 45 psi plus an additional 15
psi for each working atmosphere.
1 ATM = 33 fsw or 15 psi 2 ATM = 66 fsw or 30 psi 3 ATM = 99
fsw or 45 psi 4 ATM = 132 fsw or 60 psi 5 ATM = 165 fsw or 75 psi 6 ATM = 198
fsw or 90 psi
(e) The
output of air compressor systems shall be tested for air purity every six
months by means of samples taken at the connection to the distribution system,
except that nonoil lubricated compressors need not be tested for oil
mist.
(3) Breathing gas
supply hoses.
(a) Breathing gas supply hoses
shall:
(i) Have a working pressure at least
equal to the working pressure of the total breathing gas system;
(ii) Have a rated bursting pressure at least
equal to four times the working pressure;
(iii) Be tested at least annually to 1.5
times their working pressure; and
(iv) Have their open ends taped, capped or
plugged when not in use.
(b) Breathing gas supply hose connectors
shall:
(i) Be made of corrosion-resistant
materials;
(ii) Have a working
pressure at least equal to the working pressure of the hose to which they are
attached; and
(iii) Be resistant to
accidental disengagement.
(c) Umbilicals shall:
(i) Include a safety line which shall be
attached in a manner to remove strain from the air supply hose;
(ii) Be marked in 10-foot increments to 100
feet beginning at the diver's end, and in 50 foot increments
thereafter;
(iii) Be made of
kink-resistant materials; and
(iv)
Have a working pressure greater than the pressure equivalent to the maximum
depth of the dive (relative to the supply source) plus 100 psi.
(4) Buoyancy control.
(a) Helmets or masks connected directly to
the dry suit or other buoyancy-changing equipment shall be equipped with an
exhaust valve.
(b) A dry suit or
other buoyancy-changing equipment not directly connected to the helmet or mask
shall be equipped with an exhaust valve.
(c) When used for SCUBA diving, a buoyancy
compensator shall have an inflation source separate from the breathing gas
supply.
(d) An inflatable flotation
device capable of maintaining the diver at the surface in a face-up position,
having a manually activated inflation source independent of the breathing
supply, an oral inflation device, and an exhaust valve shall be used for SCUBA
diving.
(5) Compressed
gas cylinders. Compressed gas cylinders shall:
(a) Be designed, constructed and maintained
in accordance with the applicable provisions of WAC
296-24-295 and
296-24-940 of the General safety
and health standards.
(b) Be stored
in a ventilated area and protected from excessive heat;
(c) Be secured from falling; and
(d) Have shut-off valves recessed into the
cylinder or protected by a cap, except when in use or manifolded, or when used
for SCUBA diving.
(6)
Recompression/decompression chambers.
(a) Each
recompression/decompression chamber manufactured after the effective date of
this standard, shall be built and maintained in accordance with the ASME Code
or equivalent.
(b) Each
recompression/decompression chamber manufactured prior to the effective date of
this standard shall be maintained in conformity with the code requirements to
which it was built, or equivalent.
(c) Each recompression/decompression chamber
shall be equipped with:
(i) Means to maintain
the atmosphere below a level of 25% oxygen by volume;
(ii) Mufflers on intake and exhaust lines,
which shall be regularly inspected and maintained;
(iii) Suction guards on exhaust line
openings; and
(iv) A means for
extinguishing fire, and shall be maintained to minimize sources of ignition and
combustible material.
(7) Gauges and timekeeping devices.
(a) Gauges indicating diver depth which can
be read at the dive location shall be used for all dives except
SCUBA.
(b) Each depth gauge shall
be deadweight tested or calibrated against a master reference gauge every six
months, and when there is a discrepancy greater than two percent of full scale
between any two equivalent gauges.
(c) A cylinder pressure gauge capable of
being monitored by the diver during the dive shall be worn by each SCUBA
diver.
(d) A timekeeping device
shall be available at each dive location.
(8) Masks and helmets.
(a) Surface-supplied air and mixed-gas masks
and helmets shall have:
(i) A nonreturn valve
at the attachment point between helmet or mask and hose which shall close
readily and positively; and
(ii) An
exhaust valve.
(b)
Surface-supplied air masks and helmets shall have a minimum ventilation rate
capability of 4.5 acfm at any depth at which they are operated or the
capability of maintaining the diver's inspired carbon dioxide partial pressure
below 0.02 ATA when the diver is producing carbon dioxide at the rate of 1.6
standard liters per minute.
(9) Oxygen safety.
(a) Equipment used with oxygen or mixtures
containing over forty percent by volume oxygen shall be designed for oxygen
service.
(b) Components (except
umbilicals) exposed to oxygen or mixtures containing over forty percent by
volume oxygen shall be cleaned of flammable materials before use.
(c) Oxygen systems over 125 psig and
compressed air systems over 500 psig shall have slow-opening shut-off
valves.
(10) Weights and
harnesses.
(a) Except when heavy gear is
worn, divers shall be equipped with a weight belt or assembly capable of quick
release.
(b) Except when heavy gear
is worn or in SCUBA diving, each diver shall wear a safety harness with:
(i) A positive buckling device;
(ii) An attachment point for the umbilical to
prevent strain on the mask or helmet; and
(iii) A lifting point to distribute the pull
force of the line over the diver's body.