Secondary depth indicators.

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

northernone

Contributor
Rest in Peace
ScubaBoard Supporter
Scuba Instructor
Messages
3,792
Reaction score
3,442
Location
Currently: Cozumel, from Canada
# of dives
1000 - 2499
What's some references you use for rough depth monitoring. (And which conditions do they work on)

Back home on the river drift, I calibrate to the amount of mud in the water (once eyes adjust). Faint orange glow in the black towards the surface means between 6-13ft depth depending on the day. Great for deco without trying to read a dive computer in near 0 viz.

Caribbean without up/down wellings I use my bcd (if wearing one) set to a certain inflation. Set a level of breath pattern. Note my angle of trim. If I need to start finning up or down my buoyancy has changed. I need to check depth to confirm how much I've drifted. But it is an biological way of holding depth.

Another one, my sinuses creak/crack when I ascend 7ft depth.

My buddy needs to equalize in mathematically perfectly intervals and his ears squeak. He can count squeaks and guess depth -+4ft. (Greater accuracy above 110ft)

Color spectrum shift I know can be used.

On my most familiar old workhorse conshelf reg, gas density is a predictable depth guage, when deep.

There's a few ideas. Anyone have a couple more to add?

Cameron
 
Your ears implode: means you're too deep. :-)
 
I can "feel" subtle changes in depth because I start to feel too heavy or too light. In addition you can feel it in your ears.

I can't do what you do, which is to estimate depth based on visibility. At sites I know well I obviously learn which features are at which depths and I often take depth cues from that as well.

R..
 
The 'crackle' of the exhaust abruptly mutes down a bit, lowers frequency I think. (Bubbles are squished?)
FWIW, I wear Doc's Proplugs to keep water out of my ears, and I dislike the bubble exhaust sound. I may hear it a bit differently as a result. I also have a lot of high end hearing loss.
 
It's easy in the Caribbean: you get the textbook washout of red then green light. Once everything's blue, you're past 70-ish.
 
It's easy in the Caribbean: you get the textbook washout of red then green light. Once everything's blue, you're past 70-ish.
Doesn't the brain "white balance" a bit so this effect is mitigated?
 
Doesn't the brain "white balance" a bit so this effect is mitigated?

Up to a point: when all red is gone, you can tell. Though it may help to have a camera for an objective view. :D
 

Back
Top Bottom