No. 3 seems a little demanding
That's a lot of tanks.
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No. 3 seems a little demanding
No equipment. That's why it's so hard.That's a lot of tanks.
This is an interesting statement, and should not be followed. Panic should not be setting in! The diver doesn't have to "cut depth in half fast." That is a prescription for receiving an overpressure injury to the diver's lungs. The diver in an OOA (out-of-air) situation should be able to easily access the surface. Remember this graph:
This shows that even if a diver exhales all the air (which we almost never do), the diver still have between one and one-and-a-half liters of air in your lungs. At 100 feet (four atmospheres absolute pressure) that air is multiplied by 4 as the pressure releases. Say this diver has 2 liters of air in his/her lungs. As he/she ascends, 2 x 4 = 8 liters of air in his/her lungs, but your capacity is usually only about 4-5 liters. This represents one to two breaths of air in you lungs as you ascend. This is easily handled, but NOT if you panic.
If the thought of this situation sets a diver's mind into a panic, the diver probably should not be there in the first place. This is because the diver is not comfortable in all situations.
SeaRat
I am confused. You already made he comparison between the courses from the past and the present, and now you are asking me for the information you need to look it up to see what those differences are. Are you saying you had no factual basis for the comparison you made and were just making it up?Is there a link to the current PADI/SSI or other OW courses that I could use to compare with the NAUI course workbooks I have from the 1970s? If so, I could make such a comparison.
My comment above comes from the discussion on this thread.
I have no idea what you looked up, but you must have gone significantly back in time. When PADI (and later almost all other scuba agencies) adapted Benjamin Bloom's concept of Mastery Learning for their instructional approach, all time constraints went out the window. According to modern scuba instructional philosophies as used by nearly all scuba agencies, time of instruction is meaningless. It takes as long to teach a student as it takes for the student to learn the required skills. Whatever site you looked up that is listing hours of required instruction is out of sync with that philosophy.S, I just looked at a PADI site where the different courses are shown. The PADI Open Water Diver course uses dives only in "Confined Water" and includes 31 hours of required instruction, including the 4 open water dives, I believe. I'm not sure what "Confined Water" means, but it seems that the "Advanced Open Water" course requires another 15 hours of instruction, including "5 scuba dives." So far, I have not found a breakdown of what the courses involve by teaching subject.
Can you give examples of concepts taken out of the OW course and put into later courses? Be specific--what was in what OW course formerly and when was it taken out? To what course was it added?
I will be building on these entries as I find them. Here are the PADI requirements for watermanship:
PADI from their current (2015) manual:
NAUI, 1971 Blue Book:
These are not directly comparable, as the old NAUI course requirements were done during the course. PADI currently does require a CESA:
John,...First of all you are wrong about the CESA, which is very much a PADI requirement. PADI has not changes its CESA requirements in decades.
You said that modern instruction took things out of the old OW course and put them into more advanced courses in order to make students pay for them. I asked you to provide examples. Is this it? Yes, PADI took out silly and unnecessary swimming requirements from the old OW course. But did it add it to another later course? You did not identify the course they added it to.
I don't understand this. the RSTC multi-agency agreed requirements (these are minimums, agencies can add more) are:You do not need to be able to swim to learn to dive.
We have successfully taught two non swimmers recently.
This is something I would never do, and if anyone asked me I'd advise very strongly against it.You are out of breath, scared to death and you are 8 or 10 lbs negative, have no means to inflate the BC (orally or otherwise) and are essentially pinned to the bottom with a bag of heavy lobsters clipped to your BC.