Basic gear from mid-twentieth-century France

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The "Champion Arbalete" was sold under a number of different names in the USA by both Voit and US Divers and was produced in different barrel lengths, but the jumbo sized "Requin Flottante" was only produced in France.
Champion Requin Flottante detail R.jpg

I have the remains of a "Requin Flottante", but the rear barrel tube and mid-handle mechanism that controls a disappearing rest tab have long since disappeared when someone tried to convert the long gun to a standard Arbalete with two grip handles.

Here are the original instructions for loading this nearly 2 meter long cannon.
Cavalero Champion Arbalete Requin Flottante instructions.jpg
 
Pete: It's wonderful to see this 1946 Champion catalogue. :) Thank you so much for posting! Would you mind adding any missing French pages from this catalogue? Page 3, perhaps, and the French version of page 8 (I'm particularly keen to see whether the French term "tuba" is used for "snorkel")? If there is a catalogue page devoted to Champion fins, I'd dearly love to see it too...
 
Pete: It's wonderful to see this 1946 Champion catalogue. :) Thank you so much for posting! Would you mind adding any missing French pages from this catalogue? Page 3, perhaps, and the French version of page 8 (I'm particularly keen to see whether the French term "tuba" is used for "snorkel")? If there is a catalogue page devoted to Champion fins, I'd dearly love to see it too...
Here is page 8 in French. All pages are shown as the figure numbers are from 1 to 13, so the page marked with a "2" by persons unknown is actually the last page of a fold up document, a style used by Beuchat/Peche Sport for decades.
Cavalero Champion 1946 page 8.jpg

Plus the patent for the "Requin Flottante".
Champion Requin speargun patent 1954.jpg
 
So revenons à nos moutons. We were in mid-review of Champion diving masks with the Junior and the Junior Securit covered.

Champion Deluxe and Standard diving masks
Deluxe-Standard.jpg

You'll find the image and the captions for these models in the Finnish Diving Museum's Cavalero catalogue at http://www.sukellusmuseo.fi/esitteet/cavallero.pdf. They appear to be the adult versions of the Junior masks reviewed here a few days ago. The ribs for reinforcement are present and the focus is on the wide view the mask is designed to provide. I'm uncertain about the significance of the descriptor "bellows-type", which I would associate more with a flex-hose snorkel than a mask, and this mask doesn't appear to have a nose-pinch compensator, corrugated or not. Perhaps it's a reference to the edges of the mask skirt in contact with the face.
 
Next up is the Champion Mirador diving mask.

Champion Mirador diving mask
Mirador.jpg

This model appears in both catalogues. The caption seems to solve the puzzle I posed in the previous posting: the "elastic bellows" may be just another way of describing the rubber body of the mask or the portion of the skirt in contact with the face. The ribbing is there once again, reflecting concern about the mask collapsing under pressure against the face when diving deep.

I'll finish here for the day. Many more Champion masks to go, but we appear to have covered the "plain" oval mask designs in the company's repertoire. We'll move on next time to some compensator models.
 
The familiar dive mask has many predecessors, but for recreational diving the dive mask devised by Charles Henry Wilen (an American) and Alexandre Kramarenko (a Russian emigre) living in the South of France on the Mediterranean Coast created something to use other than fire-fighting goggles (Fernez) or aviator’s goggles adapted to free diving. An interesting comment in the "Compleat Goggler" is that spearfishermen could at times smell the fish in the water, such as Liche, which may sound odd until you remember that fish relieve themselves in the water and with the nostrils exposed this is a possibility. Many wore nose clips with their masks, but not everyone did so.
Wilen and Kramarenko dive mask.jpg
 

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