To Royal Caribbean and Disney:

Here’s the deal.

The movie and the picture here show GoPro’s current kiosk in the BestBuy near me.
Look at the woman on the poster.
What’s she playing with?
That ring shape near her hands is, of course, a bubble ring.
Click on the photo to see a full-screen view.

What’s a bubble ring? It’s like a smoke ring, except it is made of plain clean air, and it exists under water.

If you’ve seen one before, the image or video you saw was likely taken on a GoPro camera—their waterproof cameras are pretty much the way that the world was introduced to bubble rings.

But lots of people have no idea that the rings exist. Why? Because you have to be a really expert swimmer, or a skilled scuba diver, to create a bubble ring that floats up to the surface. You create them by releasing a burst of air from your mouth in a special way, usually while you are lying on your back at the bottom of a pool. (Or in her case, the ocean floor.)

So up until now, people have only experienced the rings if they ran across a video online, or if they had a friend that knew the skill.

But what if ordinary swimmers could experience bubble rings, when they go snorkeling on their Caribbean vacation? Why isn’t there a device built in to the swimming pool on your cruise ship, that makes beautiful rings come floating up to the surface, so anybody can play with them?

Because no one had figured out the engineering. Until now.

I’m ready to show my patent-pending design for a bubble ring generator. It’s perfect for any place where people swim around on the surface of clear water, and want to experience the joy of these amazing circles of spinning air.

You might ask, but what about the BBC video in your Links section, doesn’t that show a bubble ring generator that works? Why couldn’t we just duplicate the device shown there? The answer is, that device has a battery, an electrical timing device, and an air control solenoid all in a waterproof box, under the water. The engineers at BBC used a nozzle you could build from hardware store parts, in about a half an hour. Those types of designs might operate okay for a day or a week, but then you get water inside the control box, or inside the solenoid, and it stops working. It is just not a workable solution.

It’s all about the nozzle. If you have a nozzle built from plumbing parts, you have to use a very short air line between the solenoid that controls the air pulse and the nozzle, typically 12 inches in length or shorter. So then you have to put your electronics and moving parts down in the water. With our patent-pending nozzle, you can have an air line that is 17 feet or more, so the electrical parts can all stay up on the deck, or in a control room.

With my design, the only thing that goes in the water is an ordinary air hose, and the patent-pending nozzle, which has no moving parts. And that makes all the difference.

Royal Caribbean, you could own this. One out of ten kids, or more, would come home from your adventures saying that the magical bubble ring machine, in the ship pool or off the dock in the snorkeling area, was their favorite part of their vacation. And the rings are photogenic as all get out.

Have me over to your offices. We’ll meet on one of your ships, I’ll set up for five minutes, drop the simple and safe device into the pool, and you’ll see the beauty and simplicity of it right away. Let’s talk.

Click on the menu at the top right of this page, and select Links. Explore the videos there. Or just jump right to any of OceanGalz bubblering videos on YouTube. Then give me a call. I look forward to hearing from you!