JamesK
Contributor
argh, are those dive rite exp fins? gasp.
glad you had fun and welcome back.
glad you had fun and welcome back.
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In reading GI3's description of a stroke which you so graciously provided (thanks!), he never says "unsafe". He mostly describes people that don't agree with his methodology of diving. Mind you, I have never met anyone who thought that diving was an "every man for himself" sport so I really can't relate to all of it. But look at how he defines an "obvious stroke" with "their choice of gear and gear configuration". That really has nothing to do with safety.
"If you see something that is a complete mess, makes no sense, is less than optimal, or is designed to accommodate some phobia while ignoring all else, you are dealing with a stroke."
George here is basically invoking the law of unintended consequences. So the overweighted tech diver who is paranoid about not having enough lift and not being able to get off the bottom and get to the surface buys some obscene 160# wing instead of getting their rig balanced properly and winds up being unable to dump all that gas fast enough and takes a buoyant ride to the surface and either dies from a lung injury or gets severely bent/dead from DCS. The fear of drowning on the bottom of the ocean and being unable to ascend leads them to a gear choice which ultimately kills/injures them.
He's not talking about rockboots vs. turbosoles here, or even clipping the SPG to your waist vs. clipping it to your chest d-ring.
And what he writes there has everything to do with safety, but it needs to be taken in the context of some of the ideas back then, which you very rarely see around these days...
Yes.This is exactly what has happened. DIR was put out to the world in the late 90's...It was never modified from then on, and the world has changed. GUE DID change, with the times..Their language and context reflects this.So, if I understand things correctly, what is being said is that statements made in a specific context made perfect sense in that context, but may have been later misapplied by some in another context for which they were not intended. Would that be a fair summary?
...//...GUE DID change, with the times..Their language and context reflects this.
I see it differently. Let's start with Lynne's link. -really good one. Quoting from it:OK, So how do you maximise spare capacity?
"
We work at our buoyancy control until we can be precisely where we want to be in the water column, critically without putting any effort in."
I'll be the last one to disagree with that statement.
GUE changed? I refuse to believe that anything substantial actually changed in DIR/GUE until their first course reflects this foundation concept. They just lost the abrasive text.
I would expect for Course #1: Re-do one's kit into a balanced rig, demonstrate the ability to hold buoyancy and trim thus presenting a "stable platform". End of course #1. -but that would be too inclusive of an approach...
-till then, I can only wish you guys the best.