But.. I could see a nut bolt connection opening up a lot quicker (and without warning) compared to a belt with a lifting capacity of 2000 lbs wearing through to a point of catastrophic failure.
This.
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But.. I could see a nut bolt connection opening up a lot quicker (and without warning) compared to a belt with a lifting capacity of 2000 lbs wearing through to a point of catastrophic failure.
What's a DPS?Chris recently posted some craziness about introducing a false gas in his calculations to trick the DPS.
What's a DPS?
None of us were born certified, but knowing where you are the dunning-kruger curve via some level of self-awareness is pretty key for those actively teaching.I know Chris means well but some of his posts take fertile but untrained minds on distracting and unhelpful detours.
Dive planning software like Multi Deco, Baltic, Abysner, DecoPlanner, etc.
I know Chris means well but some of his posts take fertile but untrained minds on distracting and unhelpful detours.
None of us were born certified, but knowing where you are the dunning-kruger curve via some level of self-awareness is pretty key for those actively teaching.
We've been talking about Dunning-Kruger and "mount stupid" on this board for a very long time, at least 15+ years. Check out the extensive threads about Doc Deep's fatal dive for some sad examples of wildly overestimating your own knowledge when someone's basically a novice and just doesnt realize it.
Actually cutting a one piece harness to "avoid wear" would have Bill Main rolling more than his eyes.
No. Instructors are responsible for their students. Not just for safety during training dives, but for setting them on the right path to continued learning. The trouble is that most prospective students, even those with some recreational dive experience, lack a framework and judgment for identifying incompetent and dangerous technical diving instructors. The unlucky ones waste a fortune learning bad habits which take twice as long to fix later (assuming they survive). The rest of us who've been doing this stuff for a while need to take responsibility for the interests of the dive community as a whole and look out for the newbies.I am not knocking any of the initialed programs that are so prolific; nor any views in this thread....but once in the water the diver's safety is entirely their purview
I'm all for learning from diverse perspectives but we have nothing to learn from the likes of @divezonescuba. In writing there is the concept of poetic license: a skilled writer can intentionally break the conventional rules of spelling, grammar, and style to achieve a desired effect. But you have to know the rules before you can break them. You have to pass kindergarten first. This guy is unclear on the basics that he should have learned in an entry level course. He's not coming up with anything new, he's simply ignorant about the history of technical diving and is rehashing bad ideas that were tried and rejected by better divers decades ago. The adults in the room here are not impressed.Damn, said to myself that I would not get sucked into this but here I am. Old mossback that I am, I still believe that in the end experience and water time is the best teacher and that we instructors are at our best when we lead by example. Nobody has the keys to the kingdom and one size does not fit all in selection or configuration of gear, methods of instruction or diving protocols...we all have a lot we can learn from others.
No. Instructors are responsible for their students. Not just for safety during training dives, but for setting them on the right path to continued learning. The trouble is that most prospective students, even those with some recreational dive experience, lack a framework and judgment for identifying incompetent and dangerous technical diving instructors. The unlucky ones waste a fortune learning bad habits which take twice as long to fix later (assuming they survive). The rest of us who've been doing this stuff for a while need to take responsibility for the interests of the dive community as a whole and look out for the newbies.
I'm all for learning from diverse perspectives but we have nothing to learn from the likes of @divezonescuba. In writing there is the concept of poetic license: a skilled writer can intentionally break the conventional rules of spelling, grammar, and style to achieve a desired effect. But you have to know the rules before you can break them. You have to pass kindergarten first. This guy is unclear on the basics that he should have learned in an entry level course. He's not coming up with anything new, he's simply ignorant about the history of technical diving and is rehashing bad ideas that were tried and rejected by better divers decades ago. The adults in the room here are not impressed.