Here is what happened to me last week.
On a drift dive along a steep wall, I descended to 25m ( 75 feet ) and started to inflate my BCD in order to stabilize around 30m (90 feet ).
My BCD could not hold air !
Luckilly, I was not overweighted, so I could stabilize at the desired depth of 30 m ( 90 feet ), but I had to slowly swim upwards in order not to sink any further. The quick exaust valve - I discovered it later - was leaking.
There were, I thought, a few solutions at hand:
1. drop 1 kg ( 2 pounds ) of lead could have made me neutrally buoyant. Drawback: lost lead and positively buoyancy issues during the safety stop
2. Give my 1 kg weight to my dive buddy and recover it later at shallower depth with less air in the tank. Drawback: my buddy would end up slightly overweighted
What I elected to do was to launch my large ( 20 litres - 5 gallons ) closed Halcyon SMB.
This allowed me to enjoy my drift dive, suspended to my SMB. I just slowly recoverd the line on my spool ). To float at the surface was relatively easy with the help of my closed SMB.
The points to take from this is that:
You should never be overweighted for a safe dive.
A pretty large SMB with enough line on a reel or spool provides an easy alternative flotation device.
The fact that it was a closed SMB helped me to float confortably at the surface.
Of course, I should have discovered that the valve of my BCD was not competent any more. I tested the BCD on my routine "gear check", but since I did not inflate it fully, this was not detected.
Would you have done it differently? Opinions are welcome
On a drift dive along a steep wall, I descended to 25m ( 75 feet ) and started to inflate my BCD in order to stabilize around 30m (90 feet ).
My BCD could not hold air !
Luckilly, I was not overweighted, so I could stabilize at the desired depth of 30 m ( 90 feet ), but I had to slowly swim upwards in order not to sink any further. The quick exaust valve - I discovered it later - was leaking.
There were, I thought, a few solutions at hand:
1. drop 1 kg ( 2 pounds ) of lead could have made me neutrally buoyant. Drawback: lost lead and positively buoyancy issues during the safety stop

2. Give my 1 kg weight to my dive buddy and recover it later at shallower depth with less air in the tank. Drawback: my buddy would end up slightly overweighted

What I elected to do was to launch my large ( 20 litres - 5 gallons ) closed Halcyon SMB.
This allowed me to enjoy my drift dive, suspended to my SMB. I just slowly recoverd the line on my spool ). To float at the surface was relatively easy with the help of my closed SMB.
The points to take from this is that:
You should never be overweighted for a safe dive.
A pretty large SMB with enough line on a reel or spool provides an easy alternative flotation device.
The fact that it was a closed SMB helped me to float confortably at the surface.
Of course, I should have discovered that the valve of my BCD was not competent any more. I tested the BCD on my routine "gear check", but since I did not inflate it fully, this was not detected.

Would you have done it differently? Opinions are welcome
