DevonDiver
N/A
Gas management works for the anticipated. Redundant gas works for the unanticipated.
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How did you fill out your dive log without a bottom timer? Which agency? That would be completely against standard. Are you sure?My open water glass had rental gear with depth and pressure. Didnt even have a bottom timer come to think of it. The first time I saw a dive computer was when I rented gear for the first time and I said "Hey! Look at this thing!"
I thing with how much you pay for a computer, it should include a 10-20 minute 1 on 1 sit down with a KNOWLEDGEABLE rep that can explain how to use it...correctly.
I understand that in the real world, people do exceed their NDL's, but in the above cases I don't think having a rule of thumb of how much time/gas deco requires, or getting a pony bottle would have helped. You would be best to put your efforts into learning how to understand what your DC's deco screen means and to dive conservatively if you are doing multi-day/multi-dive series and not ride your NDL's.
What I AM negative about is people using them without knowing what the hey these things are telling them. I 've witnessed panic in divers because their computer told them they were in deco. Any decently OW diver SHOULD know what that means. If not, they are poorly trained.
I am not saying they should be deco experts... Just that they should know enough to realize what those numbers means. Only then will computers be worth more than expensive blingbling...
Well yea, I think we can all agree on that. But this has nothing to do with the presence or absence of a computer. If the diver doesn't understand deco and NDLs then all of the planning/monitoring is irrelevant, tables, computers or otherwise.
Heck, if anything I'd bet a diver would be MORE likely to respond to a beeping computer than happen to remember the NDL for a given depth/time while they're looking at a turtle.
Be it as it may, I am GUE trained, these guys know what they are doing ( I'm NOT saying others do not) and I fully stand behind what they teach.
So in MY world... the manifold stays open because in my world there is no valid reason to close it...
But... to each its own...
I have no idea what you mean by this. I certainly think it equips one to begin technical diving. You learn to use decompression procedures with a decompression cylinder. That is definitely within the realm of technical diving. The next step in the TDI realm introduces helium.Please note that this is an informational-only course. It is my belief that this course gives the sport diver a solid understanding of what entering "deco" means and then provides a "no panic" path back from light deco situations. This course certainly does not equip one to begin technical diving. It just provides a measure of understanding and is an excellent way to cross over the "we can't talk about that" gulf between sport and tech diving.