About: Speleonaut

An Entity of Type: ship, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Speleonaut (named from the Greek words for "cave" and "sailor") is the submersible used by the cave diver Jochen Hasenmayer. After the 1989 decompression accident that left his legs paralyzed, Hasenmayer designed the Speleonaut with his friend Konrad Gehringer in order to continue exploring the Blauhöhle cave system, which begins at the base of the Blautopf spring in the Swabian Jura mountain range. The Speleonaut is 72 centimetres (28 in) wide and has nine engines, making it easy to maneuver in all directions. It is the first submarine designed specifically for the exploration of caves. According to Hasenmayer, the Speleonaut has been tested in Lake Constance to a depth of 105 metres (344 ft) and has a design limit of 180 metres (590 ft).

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  • Speleonaut – nach den griechischen Wörtern für Höhle und Seefahrer – nannte der Höhlentaucher Jochen Hasenmayer sein Miniatur-U-Boot, das er nach einem Tauchunfall 1989 von seinem Freund Konrad Gehringer bauen ließ, um weiterhin beispielsweise die Tiefen des Blautopfs erforschen zu können. Das Fahrzeug ist 72 Zentimeter breit und mit Motoren in alle Richtungen manövrierbar. Es ist damit das erste U-Boot, das speziell zur Erforschung von Höhlen konzipiert wurde.Hasenmayer zufolge beträgt die getestete Tauchtiefe im Bodensee 105 Meter, die konstruktive Grenze um 180 Meter. Der erste Einsatz erfolgte 1996. (de)
  • Speleonaut (named from the Greek words for "cave" and "sailor") is the submersible used by the cave diver Jochen Hasenmayer. After the 1989 decompression accident that left his legs paralyzed, Hasenmayer designed the Speleonaut with his friend Konrad Gehringer in order to continue exploring the Blauhöhle cave system, which begins at the base of the Blautopf spring in the Swabian Jura mountain range. The Speleonaut is 72 centimetres (28 in) wide and has nine engines, making it easy to maneuver in all directions. It is the first submarine designed specifically for the exploration of caves. According to Hasenmayer, the Speleonaut has been tested in Lake Constance to a depth of 105 metres (344 ft) and has a design limit of 180 metres (590 ft). The Speleonaut was first used at the Blautopf in 1996. In 2001 Hasenmayer reached the Mörikedom ("Mörike cathedral") chamber of the Blauhöhle, which he had discovered in 1985, in the Speleonaut. In 2004 he reached a point beyond the Mörikedom 1,800 metres (5,900 ft) into the mountain. In the same year he discovered two more large chambers in the Blauhöhle: the Mittelschiff (or "nave") and the Äonendom. (en)
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  • 1996 (xsd:integer)
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  • Speleonaut (en)
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  • Speleonaut – nach den griechischen Wörtern für Höhle und Seefahrer – nannte der Höhlentaucher Jochen Hasenmayer sein Miniatur-U-Boot, das er nach einem Tauchunfall 1989 von seinem Freund Konrad Gehringer bauen ließ, um weiterhin beispielsweise die Tiefen des Blautopfs erforschen zu können. Das Fahrzeug ist 72 Zentimeter breit und mit Motoren in alle Richtungen manövrierbar. Es ist damit das erste U-Boot, das speziell zur Erforschung von Höhlen konzipiert wurde.Hasenmayer zufolge beträgt die getestete Tauchtiefe im Bodensee 105 Meter, die konstruktive Grenze um 180 Meter. Der erste Einsatz erfolgte 1996. (de)
  • Speleonaut (named from the Greek words for "cave" and "sailor") is the submersible used by the cave diver Jochen Hasenmayer. After the 1989 decompression accident that left his legs paralyzed, Hasenmayer designed the Speleonaut with his friend Konrad Gehringer in order to continue exploring the Blauhöhle cave system, which begins at the base of the Blautopf spring in the Swabian Jura mountain range. The Speleonaut is 72 centimetres (28 in) wide and has nine engines, making it easy to maneuver in all directions. It is the first submarine designed specifically for the exploration of caves. According to Hasenmayer, the Speleonaut has been tested in Lake Constance to a depth of 105 metres (344 ft) and has a design limit of 180 metres (590 ft). (en)
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  • Speleonaut (de)
  • Speleonaut (en)
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