ucfdiver
Contributor
I've seen it done both ways to be honest, and it really wasn't an issue.Whether or not hundreds of people do it everyday is neither here nor there. You assert that people who cannot donate a longhose routed over the right shoulder using the left hand probably do not belong in tech diving. I am merely stating that I have never heard of that specific requirement before. GUE for example, describes the proficiency in buoyancy, maintaining trim, propulsion techniques, experience, age, etc as a means to judge one's readiness for tech diving.
FWIW, IMO handing someone an object underwater using your left hand is trivial. Reaching across your face to grab the hose of your primary reg, uncoiling it from behind your neck and donating it to an out of gas diver is a little more difficult.
Personally, I'm using the left hand for the reason you're suggesting. I'd rather build the skills into muscle memory for when I get further along in diving. I stated I use the left hand earlier in this thread. I think "keeping the end in mind" is a much more valid reason than giving an example of it being impossible to not blind a buddy with the long hose donation.If procedure A is very similar (or equal) to procedure B, but procedure B "breaks" when using procedure C, but procedure A works.
Which procedure works best in all situations?
Is it better to know one procedure for a task? or should a new additional procedure be learned for a particular task every time a new procedure is added?