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Émile Gagnan

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Name
  
Emile Gagnan

Role
  
Inventor

Died
  
1979


Emile Gagnan imgbhs4com01B01B38DBA59934C623856AB076CC17A71

Organizations founded
  
Aqua Lung/La Spirotechnique

Aqua Lung - 75th Anniversary


Émile Gagnan (November 1900 – 1979) was a French engineer and, in 1943, co-inventor with French Navy diver Jacques-Yves Cousteau of the Aqua-Lung, the diving regulator (a.k.a. demand-valve) used for the first Scuba equipment. The demand-valve, or regulator, was designed for regulating gas in gas-generator engines, but was found to be excellent for regulating air-supply under varied pressure conditions. This allowed people to explore the ocean more easily, even though the original purpose was different.

Émile Gagnan Welcome To RolexMagazinecomHome Of Jake39s Rolex World Magazine

Gagnan was born in the French province of Burgundy in November 1900, and graduated from technical school in the early 1920s. He was employed as an engineer specializing in high-pressure pneumatic design by the large gas-supply firm Air Liquide. The first production ‘Scaphandre Autonome’ - or ‘Aqualung’ was released in France in 1946 under the identification code "CG45" ("C" for Cousteau, "G" for Gagnan and "45" for 1945, year of the patent).

Émile Gagnan Welcome To RolexMagazinecomHome Of Jake39s Rolex World Magazine

A year later, in 1947, Émile Gagnan and his family emigrated to Montreal, Canada and he transferred to the employ of Canadian Liquid Air Ltd. There he set up a lab and proceeded to engineer, design, prototype and patent a very large number of SCUBA and undersea technology firsts, including the direct ancestors of virtually every type of Scuba regulator in common use today.

Émile Gagnan Emile Gagnan International Scuba Diving Hall of Fame
Émile Gagnan Welcome To RolexMagazinecomHome Of Jake39s Rolex World Magazine

Émile Gagnan Welcome To RolexMagazinecomHome Of Jake39s Rolex World Magazine

Émile Gagnan Emile Gagnan and Jacques Cousteau LemelsonMIT Program

References

Émile Gagnan Wikipedia