johndiver999
Contributor
I agree that my words are too strong but what you describe at the end of your post is not what I understood from his scenario.
What I understood is that you may run out of air at a deeper depth, then you ascend and elect to do a safety stop, because you have a spare air.
To me it’s iffy to say that this the recommended way to deal with an OOA situation at 100ft:
- run out of air at 100ft
- come back up to 15ft
- finish your spare air doing an optional safety stop
I don’t see a valid reason to say that this should be the recommended way to deal with an OOA situation if you have a spare air, and I don’t think the pros outweighs the cons in this situation.Also I have met instabuddies who are not clear on the fact that safety stops are optional, so that’s the point I want to stress here.
@AfterDark makes a good point that you’ll get more air as you get up.
I am not recommending anything, not even using a spare air. Your disdain for an optional safety stop is pretty clear.
Would you feel the same if the diver had no spare air, got separated from a buddy and started an ascent from 100 feet with maybe 200 psi in their tank. What if they made a reasonable ascent and ended up at 15 feet with say 100 psi on the gauge.
What if the diver was calm and relaxed at this point? Would you still be so against the diver performing a safety stop for a few minutes before the air ran completely out? Do you see no conceivable benefit of performing the stop?
I certainly can see a potential benefit of doing the stop - after a 100 ft dive, however, I would not deny that it also has some potential problems if the diver's watermanship skills are weak (or another diver shows up and wants some air). For me, the best decision would depend on a whole range of factors that would need to be (quickly) considered.