Mistral (pressure reducer of diving)
The pressure reducer of Mistral diving was invented by Jacques-Yves Cousteau and Emile Gagnan and was marketed in 1943.
It is a pressure reducer of diving made up of only one stage to slacken the compressed air which passes directly from the high pressure to the low pressure. It is characterized by the fact that the end is connected to the pressure reducer by two spiral tubes low pressure, one for the inspiration, the other for the expiry.
It is not used practically any more today.
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