SlugLife
Contributor
That can happen right a few ways, but one cause is over-torqueing a regulator as part of servicing (done by your local dive shop, support your LDS everyone!). Predictably, the dive industry insists nobody service their own gear, and such a thing would be near impossible to detect even if you did take apart the regulator after servicing.I know a lady that had her relatively new 1st stage literally explode, splitting in half as she was geared up and waiting to splash.
Classic chicken-and-egg problem.Only diving with a team that one knows well and practices with would greatly limit when and where most people would be able to dive. How would one start diving with this team if one doesn’t know them well and has never dived with them?
Congratulations on passing Open Water, welcome to the dive community! Oh, you want to dive with a buddy? Sorry, but you lack the experience and discipline, I can't dive with you. How do you get good enough to dive with me? Find a reliable dive team, that only accepts proven experienced divers and... Nobody wants you? I guess solo dive for a while, and don't bring a pony bottle, get-good instead.