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However, to simply tell a diver to "relax" when breathing compressed air at depth, is easier said than done.
So how do you keep a steady depth during the long, relaxed breathing cycles? If I'm breathing deeply, I'm changing my displacement for a long-ish period of time. I try to breathe deeply & slowly, but I end up swimming an S-curve through a range of 3' or so. How do you manage the "hover 6" over a slit bottom" while breathing deeply?
So how do you keep a steady depth during the long, relaxed breathing cycles? If I'm breathing deeply, I'm changing my displacement for a long-ish period of time. I try to breathe deeply & slowly, but I end up swimming an S-curve through a range of 3' or so. How do you manage the "hover 6" over a slit bottom" while breathing deeply?
@dstrout: To clarify, RJP is describing a method which doesn't require finning up or down in the water column to compensate for buoyancy changes throughout the breathing cycle. A diver taking full breaths should be able to maintain position in the water column very easily. Recall that there is a slight delay which occurs between inhaling and floating up (or exhaling and floating down). With proper execution, you can time things so that these subtle buoyancy changes essentially "cancel" each other out. This is the anticipation that he describes. Over time, this breathing pattern becomes second nature. I recommend that you give it a try the next time you go diving. Just hover and see if you can do it. I think you'll be surprised by the results.
- Then you do it in an anticipatory but still conscious "Step 1, Step 2, Repeat" sort of cycle where you think "OK, I'm about to exhale now, which will make me negatively buoyant, so I need to ever-so-subtly correct my direction up...just a touch...to compensate. Good. Now, I'm about to inhale, so I need to ever-so-subtly correct my direction downward in order to compensate for increased buoyancy due to increase air in my lungs."
I recommend that you give it a try the next time you go diving. Just hover and see if you can do it. I think you'll be surprised by the results.
I recommend that you give it a try the next time you go diving. Just hover and see if you can do it. I think you'll be surprised by the results.
Sort of like explaining to someone how to do something...when they've asked how to do it. :cool2:Sort of like telling someone to learn how to walk by "just standing still" to see if they can do it.
:cool2:
Sort of like explaining to someone how to do something...when they've asked how to do it. :cool2:
I discussed breathing cycles during a hover because it directly addressed dstrout's question. From his post, I got the impression that he was unable to maintain neutral position in the water column (within a few inches) while taking normal-sized breaths...but I could be wrong.
If he can do it while hovering, then, based on the same technique, he should be able to do it while moving at a constant depth.