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I WANT a mask strap that sticks to my hair.
... so do I (sigh) ...
... Bob (Grateful Diver)
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I WANT a mask strap that sticks to my hair.
Isn't that what a scuba instructor is paid to do? To take newbies (i.e. AOW students) into situations that they have not yet been trained for and train them
I think that's a dramatic over-simplification and I think you're confused about the AOW deep specialty dive.
It is not about getting to feel narc'd or going deeper than you've ever gone before. The deep dive is about dive planning, gas management, 1/3 gas rule, surface air consumption rates, and decompression theory. You can do all these things at 65 feet without sacrificing quality.
@doctormike: Have you ever been to a quarry and have you ever done a deep dive there?
Believe me... its not easy diving 'under the right set of circumstances'
and they can be far more challenging than anything a Caribbean reef dive will throw at you.
OK, I better understand the point you were making. I wasn't questioning whether it was effective or not as much as commenting on the reason it was moved from Dive 1 to Dive 3. I agree with you - when you have people descend to 100 ft, do a task, and then ascend again within a matter of minutes, it is unlikely that narcosis will be particularly evident. At greater depth, and a longer/greater exposure to nitrogen, results may differ.At 30m the narcosis tests were simply ineffective - its not deep enough for proper impairment and the simply fact that the human brain adapts quickly to a task masked the effect. They do something on the surface, then underwater. So underwater is the 2nd time they've done a similar task in a short space of town so the increase in speed due to that adaptation often covered potential narcosis effects. . . Its still in the deep spec but it can be done deeper where there IS a much more pronounced narcotic effect.
Agreed.Either way its been removed from the adventure dive so should not be taught on that dive.
@Jim Lapenta: You are certainly task-loading your AOW students at depth, but how do you prove to the students that their suboptimal performances juggling all of those tasks at depth of 100 ffw are attributed to the cognitive deficits associated with narcosis? Later on, do you repeat the same or similar version of the series of tasks at a shallower depth? If so, how do you demonstrate that the student's improved performance at shallower depth isn't due to repetition/learning? You could do a series of tasks at shallower depths prior to the "deep" test, since one would expect repetition/learning to improve performance on the later trial. Poorer performance at depth would then be pretty persuasive.It's one of the reasons that the combination lock, math problems, write their name backwards did not get included in my AOW when I wrote it. I decided that a task load at depth should have SOMETHING to do with diving. So we descend to the 90 ft platform after dropping stages at 50, and do a quick reaction check. Finger math problem. If they look ok I tie a reel off and we swim approx 30 yds to the ridge at 100. This is in a dark, silty bottom lake. I then hand them the reel to bring us back to the platform. Hopefully with out plowing into the bottom. This means they need to manage the reel and their light. Once back at the platform they untie the reel and hand it to me. We then head for the ascent line. Somewhere between the reel hand off and the actual beginning of the ascent I pull an out of air drill. We then ascend horizontally sharing air to the 50. Once there we retrieve and deploy the stage bottles. Best test I could come up with and not have to go into actual deco. Even though it is simulated on the way up using the stages.
One of my approaches to testing these factors is to change positions (left/right, fast/slow, hiding above, etc.) to assess a student's awareness. I only do this one-on-one. Fixation and time warp are biggies, I agree. See below.Narcosis manifests in ways that aren't necessarily perceptible. Recall, perception, focus, ability to follow a plan, fixation and time warp are all casualties of narcosis having real impact and potential consequences for deep divers. How often are these issues measured or even addressed during a debrief for deep checkouts?
One of my approaches is to charge students with logging on their slates the current run time, depth, and backgas pressure every three minutes. Do a slow trial run shallow (thirty feet). Give feedback.You are certainly task-loading your AOW students at depth, but how do you prove to the students that their suboptimal performances juggling all of those tasks at depth of 100 ffw are attributed to the cognitive deficits associated with narcosis? Later on, do you repeat the same or similar version of the series of tasks at a shallower depth? If so, how do you demonstrate that the student's improved performance at shallower depth isn't due to repetition/learning? You could do a series of tasks at shallower depths prior to the "deep" test, since one would expect repetition/learning to improve performance on the later trial. Poorer performance at depth would then be pretty persuasive.