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Again, does this actually happen? Are there people behaving like children?
OMG, Ken. The stories I could tell.
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Again, does this actually happen? Are there people behaving like children?
Is someone who managed to have an uncontrolled descent the best judge of best practices?
What about diving makes people act like such children?
OMG, Ken. The stories I could tell.
Go on, specifically wanting O2 and to dive again?
Sure, or getting speared through the hand and wanting to dive again with butterfly bandages instead of stitches, or being what I consider bent and signing the refusal of treatment waiver and diving again, or tech diving solo, or any number of violation of boat rules, agency rules, or common sense and continuing to dive.
This thread is loosely based on an incident that happened recently on another liveaboard, where a diver surfaced with indications of an IPE and requested O2. The captain withheld the O2 and (things get a little fuzzy here for me) then gave him a mostly empty cylinder and told him that he would be evacuated to a military base if he insisted on going on O2 and....
I have had 2 divers surface with indications of IPE. The first was a man in his 70's diving a Vision Evolution rebreather. He came up with a pink frothy sputum and was placed on 100% O2. He refused treatment, resolved on O2, and dived again. He came up a second time with more pink frothy sputum, was placed on 100% O2, and did not dive the rest of the trip. The second was a tri-athelete also on a Vision Evolution rebreather. I don't blame the vision or the Evolution, but it is interesting that both IPE cases I've seen were on full trimix in 250+ feet. Anyway, she surfaced with full gurgling lungs (she shot her "distress" bag on deco so we knew she was coming up in trouble) but no froth. This boat hasn't moved so fast in a long time bringing her to the dock. I was able to dictate her medical treatment, as she was crew.
Point is, divers spent a lot of money to go on liveaboard. They want to "enjoy" every minute.
Seems like that policy might serve to discourage open communication from your divers... if they are aware of the policy.
The flip side to this is that .... because they offer O2 on the boat on request one does not have to observe ndl's and there fore the boat is by provision of o2 encouraging divers to push limits.
But these are examples of people who actually NEEDED O2. I was trying to establish whether there are any people that want O2 for non therapeutic purposes on a boat.
On what basis do you judge that to go slighly beyond NDL's is pushing limits?
The surface is indeed a valid stop, most likely the one with the biggest change in ATA also. Add to that all the oxygen you paid for and have to (or should) bring to the surface as reserve...... Lots of tech divers breath 100% off of their deco bottles on the surface. Maybe 20% or more?
On what basis do you judge that to go slighly beyond NDL's is pushing limits?