Maintain your gear, and be FAMILIAR with how to use it

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!

Its certainly knowing yr kit. Fumbling abt is useless. BcD aint expensive. Not using anyone else's set up n you kno why? Cos i am in it !!!! Dive safe Darlings. K
 
@Marie13 am sure you kno wot yr talking abt. I am on ND Guardian. Does this BCD have 'previous' ? K
 
The I3 is a proprietary inflate/deflate system from AquaLung. It is a lever on the left side of the BC. There is no standard inflator hose over the shoulder, although I’ve heard of people adding one. There is a small hose with a mouthpiece if you have to orally inflate. Regular buddy has one. Dislike it strongly.

If you have to use a BC with standard inflator setup, you are screwed. You have no muscle memory for standard setup. I have to remind buddy constantly that if he dives with someone besides me he HAS to tell them about how his BC inflates.

And if you’re on vacation with an I3 and the little lever breaks, who knows if you’d be able to get it quickly repaired. Jury is still out on that.
 
Another strike against the I3.

Yeah that's right, a strike against the I3 because it was getting serviced
and wearing a standard jacket the op forgot how to disconnect the hose

and with skills lacking he wouldn't have known to do it in either of them

I'll pay that
 
Basically my bcd has received a lot of shite. However i happy with it. But this week waited 4 days fr dive instructor to sort my trim out ( which i already knew solution to) trim was spot on today- purpose of post was to define "go with what you feels right for you" k
 
My suggestion is to become the one that "knows what you're doing"
Pay someone else if you want to, but how do you know if they did the right thing. You pay to rent gear and didn't go very well... the same could happen (most likely you can bet WILL happen) that one day some "technician" will make a mistake servicing your gear.

I think a knowledgeable diver should be able to dive any gear, of course we use what we like, but if one was to visit a place without intentions of diving and suddenly the opportunity comes up with borrowed-rented-stolen gear , a confident diver should take advantage of the chance.

Agreed, however, a new diver needs to get to that place in their underwater confidence first.
 
Quoting from a PM I received. Hits hard but it's 100% right as far as I'm concerned. Kind of a shame that the diving season is almost wrapped up around here. Be nice to get out some more, but I guess pool times will be starting up soon.

You have not mastered one of the most basic and important skills you were taught: How to disconnect the inflator hose.
You learned that in a real emergency you don't know how to ditch weights
You learned that in a real emergency you are prone to panic - even after you are safely on the surface.
You learned that in a real emergency you might choose to swim down, rather than dump air from the BC when you are too light
You learned that a DM can't always effectively watch over you and help you - so you need to be more self sufficient.
You learned that your problem solving skills underwater are weak - if you thought you had a bad leak from the tank/regulator - then you should have been thinking about going to the surface- 20 feet away - not fighting to exhaustion to remain at depth.
You learned that signaling a problem underwater to a buddy/DM may not be as simple as is seems.
You (hopefully) will now learn that a stuck inflator is one of the most common scuba gear failures
You learned that over exerting yourself and trying to use brute force to salvage a situation is not always best
You learned that something like dual calf cramps can incapacitate you and prevent you from swimming a short distance even in a calm lake with no current.
You learned that underwater, things can go from fine to a big problem in an instant and with no real warning.

This little incident should teach you a ton of stuff, and all of it should help you become a better diver and safer. You need to rationally critique all your thought processes and actions, work on developing a game plan to handle similar emergencies more effectively and you should figure out a way to survive failure of any single piece of gear you use. Training, practice and time in the water.


Your stated lesson of learning to never rent gear, is NOT what you should be concentrating on.
 
Agreed, however, a new diver needs to get to that place in their underwater confidence first.
Couldn't agree with you more on this. In the ocean I'm way more relaxed, even down deep. For some reason I just feel more anxious when I'm in a lake, whether it's the low vis or lack of a reference point in some situations I just don't know.
 

Back
Top Bottom