Lake Jocassee, South Carolina. Working out of the Lake Jocassee Dive Shop. I.e. diving off the LJDS boats.
If you know the lake, our dives were all on or off the Chinese Junk wall.
I may actually be diving there in 2 weeks myself.
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Lake Jocassee, South Carolina. Working out of the Lake Jocassee Dive Shop. I.e. diving off the LJDS boats.
If you know the lake, our dives were all on or off the Chinese Junk wall.
I may actually be diving there in 2 weeks myself.
Old thread, I know; but the system suggested I check it out. My recollection was that PADI also teaches switching to back gas, in contrast to the part I bolded. (TDI's support for switching to back gas was noted a few posts later.) The PADI student materials have this to say:Why not switch to backgas between bottles? Two hoses (plus your long hose) around your neck at the same time with three different gasses is a ginormous cluster. Strongly disagree with how PADI and TDI teach it in this manner.
If you’re switching from another stage or another deco cylinder, go to your back gas momentarily, close the
first cylinder valve, retuck the second stage hoses into the bands, and then go through NO TOX as you switch to the new cylinder.
With two slung and breathing from the top cylinder, there's zero possibility of mixing up which is the next gas. (There's only a single second stage available.) After pulling that second stage out (holding it in my right hand) and turning gas on (with my left), it's trivial to remove the regulator from my mouth with my left hand and pull the hose over my head. Loop the hose behind my neck with the right and insert into mouth. It's very efficient. After that, just stow the hose in your left hand (it's the top cylinder, so easily done).I have practiced switching directly to one deco gas from another and it didn't seem any harder than switching from back gas to a deco gas. Maybe easier. There's a lot less gas switches that way too, which seems like a good idea. And no frequent clipping and unclipping of the primary back gas 2nd stage.
However, at no time are there two deco hoses around your neck in what I described.Two hoses (plus your long hose) around your neck at the same time with three different gasses is a ginormous cluster.
In short it is about developing and reinforcing solid habits to reduce potential bad switches if/when you carry multiple bottles. Same reason to follow a gas switching and verification procedure when only carrying one bottle. Plus it is simpler to clean up the first bottle and stow the reg without the reg from the second deployed.My primary reason for resurrecting this thread was to discuss why it was seemingly universally recommended to go to back gas between deco gases. I was taught to try them both (switch to back gas as well as going direct) and see which worked better for me. I came to a similar conclusion as Stuart pointed out:
With two slung and breathing from the top cylinder, there's zero possibility of mixing up which is the next gas. (There's only a single second stage available.) After pulling that second stage out (holding it in my right hand) and turning gas on (with my left), it's trivial to remove the regulator from my mouth with my left hand and pull the hose over my head. Loop the hose behind my neck with the right and insert into mouth. It's very efficient. After that, just stow the hose in your left hand (it's the top cylinder, so easily done).
This seemed to capture the spirit of the issue (as best I can tell):
However, at no time are there two deco hoses around your neck in what I described.
I have the utmost respect for the various voices advocating "switch to back-gas" so I'm honestly trying to understand what the problem is. Is the worry that one might simply mix up the order and cross the hoses? Does the issue surface later with more cylinders? I haven't yet pursued trimix, but after switching, it seems reasonable to me to shift that top (used) cylinder to the leash or nose-clip to hip ring and bring the the next cylinder forward underneath the one I'm currently using. For that matter, it's even a little easier to stow the hose with the cylinder out in front of me (part way through the rearward shift when it's still clipped to the chest ring).
@stuartv, have you switched your approach in the last year? If so, what changed your mind?
"Breathing from the top cylinder" is the start of where you are going amiss here. What happens when your cylinders are reversed? You've dropped them and picked them up in a cave and reversed their clipping. Or the skipper helped you put them on and you fail to discover they are backwards. You never want to be using cylinder position for anything. Also "put the next cylinder underneath" My recommendations is to stop using cylinder position as indicative of anything right now.My primary reason for resurrecting this thread was to discuss why it was seemingly universally recommended to go to back gas between deco gases. I was taught to try them both (switch to back gas as well as going direct) and see which worked better for me. I came to a similar conclusion as Stuart pointed out:
With two slung and breathing from the top cylinder, there's zero possibility of mixing up which is the next gas. (There's only a single second stage available.) After pulling that second stage out (holding it in my right hand) and turning gas on (with my left), it's trivial to remove the regulator from my mouth with my left hand and pull the hose over my head. Loop the hose behind my neck with the right and insert into mouth. It's very efficient. After that, just stow the hose in your left hand (it's the top cylinder, so easily done).
This seemed to capture the spirit of the issue (as best I can tell):
However, at no time are there two deco hoses around your neck in what I described.
I have the utmost respect for the various voices advocating "switch to back-gas" so I'm honestly trying to understand what the problem is. Is the worry that one might simply mix up the order and cross the hoses? Does the issue surface later with more cylinders? I haven't yet pursued trimix, but after switching, it seems reasonable to me to shift that top (used) cylinder to the leash or nose-clip to hip ring and bring the the next cylinder forward underneath the one I'm currently using. For that matter, it's even a little easier to stow the hose with the cylinder out in front of me (part way through the rearward shift when it's still clipped to the chest ring).
@stuartv, have you switched your approach in the last year? If so, what changed your mind?
My primary reason for resurrecting this thread was to discuss why it was seemingly universally recommended to go to back gas between deco gases. I was taught to try them both (switch to back gas as well as going direct) and see which worked better for me. I came to a similar conclusion as Stuart pointed out:
With two slung and breathing from the top cylinder, there's zero possibility of mixing up which is the next gas. (There's only a single second stage available.) After pulling that second stage out (holding it in my right hand) and turning gas on (with my left), it's trivial to remove the regulator from my mouth with my left hand and pull the hose over my head. Loop the hose behind my neck with the right and insert into mouth. It's very efficient. After that, just stow the hose in your left hand (it's the top cylinder, so easily done).
This seemed to capture the spirit of the issue (as best I can tell):
However, at no time are there two deco hoses around your neck in what I described.
I have the utmost respect for the various voices advocating "switch to back-gas" so I'm honestly trying to understand what the problem is. Is the worry that one might simply mix up the order and cross the hoses? Does the issue surface later with more cylinders? I haven't yet pursued trimix, but after switching, it seems reasonable to me to shift that top (used) cylinder to the leash or nose-clip to hip ring and bring the the next cylinder forward underneath the one I'm currently using. For that matter, it's even a little easier to stow the hose with the cylinder out in front of me (part way through the rearward shift when it's still clipped to the chest ring).
@stuartv, have you switched your approach in the last year? If so, what changed your mind?
Yes although how many OC 10/70 dives have you actually done? The closest I have been to OC 10/70 is 12/65 for a ~290ft dive quite a few years ago.Intermediate switching to backgas - do you do that on the last switch, e.g. switching from 50% to 100%? With 10/70 on your back?
I don't.
Take the 50% back from around your neck, put the 100% around your neck and continue breathing. That stop is the longest and there is loads of time to stow your 50%. No rush, no entanglement, no clusterfcuk. I want to enjoy the reef, that's why I did a dive there.
I don't use cylinder position as indicative of anything. The actual switching procedure -- noting depth, confirming MOD on tank, pulling reg, tracing hose back to the regulator/valve, turning that specific valve, etc. -- wasn't my point of confusion. I do those things regardless of where tanks might be, though I appreciate you pointing out the importance of such. I completely agree with you.My recommendations is to stop using cylinder position as indicative of anything right now.