- Émile
Gagnan (1900 – 1984) was a
French engineer and, in 1943, co-inventor with
French Navy
diver Jacques-Yves
Cousteau of the Aqua-Lung, the
diving regulator...
-
engineer Émile
Gagnan and
Jacques Cousteau, who was a
Naval Lieutenant (French:
lieutenant de vaisseau). It
allowed Cousteau and
Gagnan to film and explore...
- Jacques-Yves
Cousteau met in
Paris for the
first time the
engineer Émile
Gagnan,
employee at Air Liquide, a
French company specialising in
compressed gas...
- "design around" the Cousteau-
Gagnan aqua-lung patent, and to get rid of air
supply restrictions that
affected early Cousteau-
Gagnan-type aqua-lungs. He started...
- sell Cousteau-
Gagnan sets
under the
names of
scaphandre Cousteau-
Gagnan ('Cousteau-
Gagnan scuba set'), CG45 ("C" for Cousteau, "G" for
Gagnan and "45" for...
-
introduced Cousteau to
Gagnan in
December 1942. On Cousteau's initiative,
Gagnan's regulator was
adapted to diving, and the new Cousteau-
Gagnan patent was registered...
-
French national,
Cousteau wrote the book in English.
Cousteau and Émile
Gagnan designed, built, and
tested the
first "aqua-lung" in the
summer of 1943...
-
Deane Louis de
Corlieu Auguste Denayrouze Ted
Eldred Henry Fleuss Émile
Gagnan Karl
Heinrich Klingert Peter Kreeft Christian J.
Lambertsen Yves Le Prieur...
-
Deane Louis de
Corlieu Auguste Denayrouze Ted
Eldred Henry Fleuss Émile
Gagnan Karl
Heinrich Klingert Peter Kreeft Christian J.
Lambertsen Yves Le Prieur...
- the Air
Liquide company,
following instructions from
Cousteau and Émile
Gagnan. When
making Épaves,
Cousteau could not find the
necessary blank reels of...