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I found that friction work best...or at least felt the best.
Has anyone tried this. Obviously water shouldn't work. I'm getting a drysuit with a pee valve installed and am a little disheartened by glue-incident stories.
I know that female aircraft and submersible pilots sometime use a device that has a soft cup that funnels down into a tube. When held in place it permits the pilot to direct her stream into an appropriate container with a minimum of spill that can be contained easily by a strategically positioned Johnson and Johnson "Serenity" feminine bladder control pad....
Oh on another note for the first time in my life I was stuned, shocked, confused, and totally speachless. I was guiding a dive and a woman put her drysuit on and made a comment that for a used suit it was in really good shape, she said she bought the suit new. You might be woundering why I thought it was a used suit. She had a pee valve, then I was woundering a couple other things, like she doesnt have an adams apple and has womanly hands. I didnt really know what to say after that. She told me that if I was a woman she would explain more, but I did not want to know. The only thing I can guess is there is a razor, pocket mask and some super glue involved.
My daughter and a model maker have developed, a urinal device suitable for ladies. The urinal device is made from silicone rubber and is applied to the Vagina prior to take-off. It is non intrusive, according to some ladies who have tested the unit. Relief for the female pilot can now be similar to the men, via a bag or via a direct exhaust tube (Pee tube). Sitting on or withholding wet nappies is no longer the only choice for female pilots.
The Ladies National Champion has used the device for several years and an overseas female has used it for competition flying. The unit appears so successful that female relief problems are no longer an issue. Please contact: katrin.senne@gmx.de