A Guide by ESS‑TEK – Essex Scuba’s Technical Diving Division
Modern technical divers typically choose between two breathing systems: Open Circuit (OC) and Closed Circuit Rebreather (CCR). These systems dramatically influence gas use, skill progression, cost, achievable depths, and real‑world dive applications.
This guide provides a clear comparison grounded in ESS‑TEK’s TDI training pathways, including CCR Air Diluent and CCR Helitrox Diver programmes.
⭐ Summary Table: CCR vs Open Circuit
| Feature | Open Circuit (OC) | Closed Circuit Rebreather (CCR) |
|---|---|---|
| Gas Efficiency | High consumption | Very low (recycled) |
| Narcosis | Higher unless helium used | Reduced with Helitrox |
| Noise Level | Audible bubbles | Near‑silent (better wildlife encounters) |
| Depth Capability | Good (Trimix required) | Excellent with Helitrox/Trimix |
| Duration | Limited by cylinder volume | Much longer due to gas recycling |
| Complexity | Lower | Higher — requires discipline & monitoring |
| Cost | Lower initial | More cost‑effective long‑term for deep dives |
🔧 1. How the Systems Work
Open Circuit(OC) | Closed Circuit Rebreather (CCR) |
|---|---|
OC delivers gas from a cylinder and vents bubbles into the water. | CCR systems recycle the diver’s breathing gas, adding oxygen to maintain the optimal partial pressure (set‑point). |
TDI’s foundational courses such as Intro to Tech focus on:
Best for:
| ESS‑TEK’s TDI CCR courses emphasise:
Best for:
|
🫧 2. Gas Efficiency & Dive Duration
Open Circuit: | CCR: |
|---|---|
OC divers use large gas volumes, particularly at depth. Deeper dives require:
| CCR divers consume only the oxygen they metabolise; helium and diluent are recycled. ESS‑TEK highlights:
|
🧠 3. Narcosis, Gas Density & Helium Use
Open Circuit: | CCR: |
|---|---|
Narcosis becomes a limiting factor at depth; Trimix is required for dives beyond ~40m. Training at ESS‑TEK includes:
| CCR Helitrox Diver training introduces helium‑based diluents that:
|
💨 4. Noise, Bubbles & Marine Life Interaction
Open Circuit: | CCR: |
|---|---|
| ESS‑TEK’s TDI CCR courses emphasise:
|
⚖️ 5. Buoyancy & Trim Stability
OC Buoyancy | CCR Buoyancy |
|---|---|
Mastered through TDI Intro to Tech (trim, buoyancy, propulsion). | CCR buoyancy is influenced by loop volume and counterlungs. ESS‑TEK’s TDI CCR training focuses on:
|
🧰 6. Complexity, Checklists & Failure Management
Open Circuit: | CCR: |
|---|---|
|
CCR divers are trained to think technically, not just dive technically. |
💷 7. Cost Comparison
Open Circuit: | CCR: |
|---|---|
|
For divers doing frequent deep dives, CCR becomes more cost‑effective over time. |
| System | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Open Circuit (OC) | • Simple and reliable mechanical system (easy to maintain) • Ideal for foundational technical training: buoyancy, trim, gas switches, and propulsion skills in TDI Intro to Tech • Lower upfront equipment cost • Easier troubleshooting and emergency handling | • High gas consumption, especially at depth • Expensive helium fills and multiple cylinders needed for deep or long decompression dives • Noisy and produces bubbles, disturbing marine life (less suitable for photography) • Limited bottom time determined by cylinder volume • Higher narcosis risk unless helium mixes are used |
| Closed Circuit Rebreather (CCR) | • Near‑silent diving with minimal bubbles—ideal for wildlife, wreck penetration, and photography • Extremely gas‑efficient: only metabolised oxygen consumed; helium is recycled • Reduced nitrogen narcosis and improved clarity at depth using Helitrox diluents • Longer bottom times and more efficient decompression due to constant PPO₂ • Superior performance on deep, long, or expedition‑class dives | • Higher initial equipment cost • More complex system requiring strong checklist discipline and failure‑management training • Requires additional maintenance (scrubber material, oxygen cells) • Steeper learning curve and higher cognitive workload • Must carry adequate bailout gas (still requires OC planning knowledge) |
🌍 8. Real‑World Dive Scenarios
These examples help answer queries such as:
“Should I choose CCR or twinset for wreck diving?”
“Is CCR better for long decompression dives?”
🛳 Example 1 — 65m Trimix Wreck Dive (Malta)
Open Circuit: | CCR: |
|---|---|
|
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❄️ Example 2 — UK Cold‑Water Decompression Diving (Stoney Cove / NDAC)
Open Circuit: | CCR: |
|---|---|
|
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📸 Example 3 — Photographers at 30–40m on a Reef or Wreck
Open Circuit: | CCR: |
|---|---|
|
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🧭 9. Which Path Should You Choose?
Choose Open Circuit if you: | Choose CCR if you: |
|---|---|
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📞 Ready to Progress? Let ESS‑TEK Guide You
ESS‑TEK offers the complete TDI pathway:
- Intro to Tech
- Advanced Nitrox
- Decompression Procedures
- Trimix / Helitrox
- TDI CCR Air Diluent (MOD1)
- TDI CCR Helitrox Diver (MOD2)
Whether you’re stepping into technical for the first time or preparing for advanced CCR exploration, ESS‑TEK provides precision‑based, progression‑driven training built for real‑world conditions.

