Is horizontal position really better?

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!

You've made your own point; the "right" position depends on the situation.

Didn't we discuss that here already lol

 
I see that all the time, for recreational dive guides. Perhaps the difference is where you dive versus the rest of the world?

See guides in horizontal trim in Asia, sure all the time when goiung from one spot to another but will often go half vertical when looking for their group of divers. Many will also swim on their backs looking for divers following.

Not so many with bp/w only a few pretty much all using bcd.
 
Ah man been doing it wrong for 5 million years….🤦‍♂️
 

Attachments

  • 75A21686-DA24-48D0-A9FB-41CA9724840A.jpeg
    75A21686-DA24-48D0-A9FB-41CA9724840A.jpeg
    97.5 KB · Views: 69
Ah man been doing it wrong for 5 million years….🤦‍♂️

Razor fish must go to a DIR class then. Never see them in horizontal trim. I was in horizontal trim for this video but the razor fish just stay vertical and they moved away from me. The turtle was not fazed at all. It's convenient when things are below you but not always horizontal when marine life swims past above me.




not my photo

razor fish.jpg
 
Personally I prefer slightly head up easier on my damaged vertebrae. The revo breaths maybe marginally better, doesn’t mean dragging your feet either. I dove al80’s doubles with a wetsuit in Mexico which seem to naturally want to make you pancake flat and my neck was pissed.
 
This is the way it’s done 100% of the time.
 

Attachments

  • E5C24907-D1CE-4DCF-AE0A-22B517DE3415.jpeg
    E5C24907-D1CE-4DCF-AE0A-22B517DE3415.jpeg
    54.2 KB · Views: 74
Here are two dives I've made, and this is a rather long video. It's long as I wanted to give fisheries people, biologists and limnologists a longer view of how lampreys spawn. It shows me diving two dives in high current, and my body positions. At most times I'm horizontal, so as to swim against the current, but at times, like when I got tangled with fishing line, then had to remove tangles with my float line and my hammerhead unit, I would go vertical. I've been diving a very long time, and so haven't decided on a particular body position for all my time in the water. It really depends upon the circumstances. Since I dive mostly in rivers around Portland, Oregon, I'm not worried about putting my knees on the bottom too. That's a carryover from technical diving in caves or diving on coral reefs. Here's the two lamprey spawning dives:


SeaRat
 
Of course, I did not mean to say that vertical position would be adequate when swimming long distances or fighting the current. I think that I’ve read SB too much in those last months:). I was like: how come those people who are better divers than me don’t know GUE? Except one guy with 25 years of experience with the US navy who told me he never saw a DIR diver in Koh Samui. People thought I was showing off releasing my DSMB horizontal. I was also very surprised that very experienced divers had jacket BCDs and not BP/W. I got my answer to why releasing the DSMB in an horizontal is better if not more confortable. Thanks @ginti . Last word: diving in Thailand was really awesome:yeahbaby:. I only knew Bangkok before. Everything in the islands is wonderful for the divers. People’s attitude, weather, food, partying. I will come back in September.
 
But, really, is the horizontal position always the best one?
The short answer is "no". Different conditions require different approaches.

The question behind the question is more important. Trim is usually only touched on in open water, and it's rarely defined adequately much less equated to being horizontal. I've even heard a few instructors explain it as not having a lot of danglies. Why? It's because, in an open ocean, you have little to restrict you from diving in most any attitude until you get to the bottom. It's then when your horrible trim wreaks havoc, both for the environment and your fellow divers. Unfortunately, the roto-tillers never see the clouds of silt they create. At their usual 45o tilt they see only what's in front of them, while the mess they are creating is below and behind them. Consequently, I've seen horrible silters who believe their trim is impeccable. It amazes me just how much crap they stir up but think it's everyone else's problem and not theirs. Just like a few posters here on SB, actually, and thanks to the Mod who cleaned this thread up!!!

The real question then, is why are there so many divers that can't or won't dive horizontally when the conditions call for it? I don't really care how you dive 20 ft above the bottom, but why are you kicking the crap out of my reef when you're close? Why do you think we are being so unreasonable in wanting you to stop doing that? If you want to dive within an arm's length of the reef, but can't get horizontal and frog kick, then you're screwing it up. A soft horizontal flutter kick requires at least 4ft of clearance. An angled/overweighted flutter kick requires 10ft or more. However, a horizontal frog kick requires merely an inch or two, depending on your skill and situational awareness. It's my humble opinion that they aren't diving horizontally mostly because they can't. Few divers can hover two inches above the bottom, close their eyes for a minute or two and remain precisely where they started. Rather than commit the time, energy, and mental acuity needed to achieve this, it's easier to tell those who can that being horizontal is over-rated. Meh.

As for dive professionals having to dive in a supine position to herd their kittens: rubbish. Those are reminiscent of underwater forced marches as they try to push their herd to the next photo-op. I've taught and guided professionally, and the only time I do that is to show off or if we're at our safety stop and I'm mostly vertical already. It's easier to listen to what's happening around you and then lower your head and look between your fins if things don't sound right.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/perdix-ai/

Back
Top Bottom