Claims
- 1. A pressure indicator comprising:
an indicator support surrounding an opening; an elastomer facing united with said indicator support, said facing having a free region overlaying said opening, said free region having an inner surface and an outer surface, said free region being deflectable by a relative pressure differential between said inner and outer surfaces.
- 2. The pressure indicator of claim 1 wherein said facing has a supported region overlaying and united with said indicator support, said regions being continuous.
- 3. The pressure indicator of claim 1 wherein said indicator support is engineering plastic and said indicator support and said facing are codiffused.
- 4. The pressure indicator of claim 1 further comprising a backup portion disposed interior to said opening, said backup portion being disposed in overlapping relation to said opening.
- 5. The pressure indicator of claim 4 wherein said free region is deflected inward toward said backup portion when said inner surface is at a lower pressure than said outer surface.
- 6. An underwater housing having an internal cavity sealed water-tightly from an external environment, said housing comprising:
a non-elastomer shell having a border portion surrounding a passage; an elastomer facing having a free region overlaying said passage, said free region having an inner surface in communication with said cavity and an outer surface in communication with the external environment, said free region being deflectable by a relative pressure differential between said inner and outer surfaces.
- 7. The housing of claim 6 wherein said facing is external to said shell.
- 8. The housing of claim 6 wherein said shell is engineering plastic and said shell and said facing are codiffused.
- 9. The housing of claim 6 wherein said shell has a backup portion disposed interior to said passage, said backup portion being disposed in overlapping relation to said passage.
- 10. The housing of claim 9 wherein said housing has separable first and second housing parts, said first housing part including said border portion, said second housing part including said backup portion.
- 11. The housing of claim 10 wherein said first housing part is a one-piece plastic casting.
- 12. The housing of claim 6 wherein said inner and outer surfaces are in a flat configuration, a curved inward configuration, and curved outward configuration, when said cavity is at a pressure that is the same as, lower than, and higher than said external environment, all respectively.
- 13. The housing of claim 12 wherein said configurations of said outer surface are tactilely discernable.
- 14. An underwater camera comprising
a housing defining an internal cavity, said housing sealing said internal cavity water-tightly from an external environment, said housing including:
a non-elastomer shell having a border portion surrounding a passage; an elastomer facing having a free region overlaying said passage, said free region having an inner surface in communication with said cavity and an outer surface in communication with the external environment, said free region being deflectable by a relative pressure differential between said inner and outer surfaces; and a camera frame assembly disposed in said internal cavity.
- 15. The camera of claim 14 wherein said shell has a backup portion disposed interior to said passage, said backup portion being disposed in overlapping relation to said passage.
- 16. The camera of claim 15 wherein said housing has separable first and second housing parts, said first housing part including said border portion, said second housing part including said backup portion.
- 17. The camera of claim 16 wherein said first housing part is a one-piece plastic casting.
- 18. The camera of claim 14 wherein said facing is external to said shell.
- 19. A underwater photographic method comprising the steps of:
maintaining an internal cavity sealed water-tightly from an external environment; maintaining a free region of elastomer between said internal cavity and said external environment; and during said maintaining steps, preventing excessive excursion of said free region into said internal cavity.
- 20. A camera comprising:
means for maintaining an internal cavity sealed water-tightly from an external environment; means for maintaining a free region of elastomer between said internal cavity and said external environment; and means for preventing, during said maintaining steps, excessive excursion of said free region into said internal cavity.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] Reference is made to commonly assigned, co-pending U.S. patent applications Ser. No. ______ [Attorney Docket No. 83596RLW], entitled: UNDERWATER ONE-TIME-USE CAMERA HAVING CAMERA FRAME ASSEMBLY RETAINED IN FRONT HOUSING PART AT UNLOADING, filed ______ in the names of Wayne E. Stiehler and Stephen J. Smith; Ser. No. ______ [Attorney Docket No. 83821RLW], entitled: DEPRESSURIZED UNDERWATER ONE-TIME-USE CAMERA WITH SEAL INTEGRITY INDICATOR AND METHOD, filed ______ in the names of Stephen J. Smith, Craig A. Baker, and Wayne E. Stiehler; Ser. No. ______ [Attorney Docket No. 83822RLW], entitled: CAMERA AND UNDERWATER HOUSING HAVING TWO-SHOT MOLDED KNOB SEAT, filed ______ in the names of Stephen J. Smith, Craig A. Baker, and Wayne E. Stiehler; Ser. No. ______ [Attorney Docket No. 83823RLW], entitled: UNDERWATER CAMERA HOUSING HAVING SEALED PIVOTABLE SHUTTER ACTUATOR AND METHOD, filed ______ in the names of Stephen J. Smith, Craig A. Baker, and Wayne E. Stiehler; Ser. No. ______ [Attorney Docket No. 83832RLW], entitled: UNDERWATER CAMERA HAVING VIEWPORTS BEARING ON VIEWFINDER TUNNEL OF FRAME, filed ______ in the names of Stephen J. Smith, Wayne E. Stiehler, and Craig A. Baker; Ser. No. ______ [Attorney Docket No. 83833RLW], entitled: DUAL ACTION SHUTTER RELEASE WITH THUMBWHEEL BRAKE AND METHODS, filed ______ in the names of Wayne E. Stiehler, Stephen J. Smith, and Craig A. Baker; Ser. No. ______ [Attorney Docket No. 83831], entitled: UNDERWATER HOUSING ASSEMBLY, filed ______ in the names of Stephen J. Smith, Wayne E. Stiehler, Edwin J. Khang, and Jeffrey S. Eng.