You may not realize this, but diving is all about limits. Those tables or PDC (Personal Dive Computer) on your wrist? They actually define some of your limits. Your gas, your gear, the dive op (or not) are also limits, but you may not realize it. In reality, a lot of accidents are caused by divers exceeding limitations without even realizing it. No one wants to get hurt, so lets discuss limits for a bit.
By definition, a limit is a boundary. It actually comes from the Latin that means the edge or path between feilds. Some limits are hard and inviolate. Other limits are soft or voluntary. Still, other limits are hard to define but they are still there, like it or not. They're still there and you need to figure them out and then respect them. It's your fun and safety on the line.
Every dive plan begins with three limits: Depth, Time and Gas. These should be established without question before every dive, and you should have strategies that enable you to keep or honor these limits. Don't go too deep, don't stay too long and please don't run out of air. Easy, right? Maybe. Let's explore it.
Depth: This is both a hard and a soft boundary. You're told not to exceed 60ft when you first get certified, but what if you do 61ft? How about 70ft, 90ft or deeper? There are no Scuba police out there to stop you. Moreover, 80ft in Cozumel may be easiier than 61ft in a quarry. You, and you alone are responsible for how deep you go on any particular dive, and that brings us to some other limits. These are limits like training, gear, conditions, your buddy and your mindset. Whatever, you need to establish that before you splash and be sure you don't change the plan at depth.
Time: Going hand and hand with depth, together they keep you from getting bent. But what about accidental or casual deco? Are you really ready for it? Most divers plan for everything to go well, but deco necessitates that you plan for things to go sideways. Don't know how things can go sideways? Perhaps you're not able to really plan deco responsibly. Again, training, gear, conditions, your buddy and your mindset affect these limits. Yes, it bothers me to see divers pushing this limit needlessly. Don't take it so casually.
Gas: In my estimation, this is the most misunderstood part of the three. Being on the boat with 500 psi is not a cogent plan for your gas. How do you do that? What's the rule of halves? How about the rule of thirds? If you don't know, then you're just hoping to get it right and hope is never a good plan. If you're diving recreationally then you probably should at least learn how to properly "halve" your air responsibly. Remember, you're not just planning for everything to go right: you're planning for when things go sideways with a buffer. Let's work this backward. I have found that you should start your ascent with a 100psi/10ft of depth but with a 600 psi minimum. This should give you enough air for you and a stressed out buddy to surface with maybe even a safety stop thrown in. So, take your planned depth, calculate your ascent pressure, subtract it from your start pressure and then divide the remainder in half. That's how much gas you get to use. Subtract it from your starting pressure (again) and you now have your turn pressure.
Here's a dive to 80ft with an AL80 @3,000psi
80x10= 800psi ascent pressure.
(3000-800)/2= 1100psi usable gas
3000-1100= 1900psi is now your turn pressure
So, there's the first three, and probably most important, limits to your diving. Don't forget the others, as they're pretty important too. Let's start a list and feel free to add to them.
- Training. Make a New years resolution to not exceed your training. Instead, get the training you need, then do the dives.
- Experience. Harder to come by as there are no shortcuts, but don't substitute oodles of training for experience. Knowledge is great, but its application takes time. Too much knowledge, too fast can be confusing and cause you to miss obvious solutions. It's all about muscle memory and the systematic addition of skills, not how fast you can get deep.
- Judgement. That's really the combination of the first two items on this list. I've heard people say that this comes from making bad decisions, and I think that's a lot of bull. Like experience, there's no shortcut to having good judgment. It's a matter of hours underwater making right decisions. Ever call a dive? Why not? OK, maybe you're just starting out and haven't had the need to do so. Just learn not to force your diving. You should feel free to be able to call a dive at any time, for any reason with no questions asked.
- Gear. When I was in high school, there was a Chevy commercial that posited that you shouldn't try to haul two ton of fertilizer with a one-ton truck. Do you have the right gear to do the dive? I'll call a dive before I splash without a cutting device, a finger spool and a sausage. If I'm diving deep or solo, I want a stage or pony of the appropriate size. Don't have it? Don't do the dive. Am I being overly cautious? I don't think that's possible.
- Conditions. How are the waves? How are you getting in and OUT of the water? Especially OUT??? Are there currents and can you swim against them?
- Your Buddy. Just as important as your own limitations are those of your buddy. Always use the lower limits.
- Attitude. Obviously, this is the most important limit of them all. Without a great and cautious attitude, the other limits won't mean much.