CWK
Contributor
The SMB is the tool that's used to tax other skills like buoyancy and trim. Complicating the deployment of the SMB isn't designed to make you better at shooting a bag, they could do the same thing without having them separate.
OK. So we are now talking about bouyancy and trim. Let me post a video again so that we all know what we are talking about.
In this video, the diver clips off his double ender at 0:40. Note that he is doing things at a leisurely pace. He releases the SMB at 1:05. From clipping off the double ender to release of SMB is what I consider the core part of SMB deployment. This is the part where we want to develop muscle memory. The diver completes the core part of SMB deployment in 25 seconds at a leisurely pace. He could do it in 20 seconds if he wanted.
In terms of training SMB deployment, you can complicate things before and after the core part of SMB deployment so that you do not interfere with development of muscle memory for the core skill of SMB deployment. Checking depth during the core 20 seconds is unnecessary. Ironing out a SMB is totally unnecessary. If you want to add complications, add a depth check at the very beginning and at the very end of the exercise. If you want to complicate further, have the diver start with the line and SMB seperate instead of attached. But do not add unnecessary elements to the core part of SMB deploymet because it interferes with development of muscle memory.
In terms of bouyancy and trim. The diver in the original current video has to continually monitor bouyancy and trim because she is in a very unique position. She has a reef immediately below her and a strong current above. She is either on a ledge or there is a coral head in front of her that is sheltering her from the full force of the current. If she drifts up a 1m, she will be swept away by the current. If she drops by 1m, she will hit the reef. By all means give her a simple task like SMB deployment and make it more complicated than necessary in order to task load her. But do not mess with the core part of SMB deployment in the process because it is intefering with the development of muscle memory for this procedure. And it is totally unnecessary to make her look at her computer to check her depth. She is in a position where she cannot drift up or down by more than 1m, and she knows that. Telling her to look at her computer to check her depth is adding a totally unnecessary element that is not logical because she knows her depth without looking at her computer. In a sense, her depth is unimportant. She has to ensure that she does not hit the reef below her and that she does not drift above whatever is in front of her that is sheltering her from the current. Monitoring her position within her environment is important, not the depth shown on her computer.
I don't think we disagree on task loading and muscle memory. We can disagree on how to achieve this.