Gandalf-the-Diver
Contributor
I am new to scuba diving with only a couple dives under my belt. I am a little OCD and tend to pay attention to my gauge more than enjoying the dive as I am always worried about my pressure. I have a 13cf pony bottle. Would being a new diver and having the pony tank connected to my main tank for the piece of mind confuse me and be tougher for me starting out? When I started paramotoring, they recommended not flying with a reserve because it is more likely to accidentally deploy and cause more problems.
Be happy to have a pony, carry it and practice with it. I was you, last Sept. I met a bit of resistance from some people, and tons of inspiration and positive reactions from the rest. Sling it though. I would recommend diagonally across your chest, as it counter-balances itself. No need to worry about weight differential, because your tank is mounted on one side of your tank. Leave an octo on your rig and know how your hand needs to move to so you can recover your pony stage 2, and do it blind. If your pony is mounted to your tank, you will have to counterbalance it. You will also want to have an spg on your pony, and if the tank is right in front of you, a little 6" hose on the spg is all that is needed.
These are not the fatalities, these are the obvious pony related mistakes from the reports currently on the BSAC web site. I have older ones on other machines. Edward also remembers there being fatalities. Do you really need a fatality to believe that it is a terrible idea for a novice diver to have a complicated bit of extra kit? A bunch of rapid ascents and particularly the failure to switch to back gas.
New divers are easily flustered by unexpected events. How someone deals with weird stuff is a good measure of comfort and ability. Someone with hundreds of dives will manage better than someone with five or ten. Someone dived up will probably manage better than someone coming back after a layoff. Adding unnecessary complications when less able is a mistake.
Nothing complicated about slinging a pony, if it is slung, less likelihood of breathing off it by accident. Quite easy to carry actually, rather light.