Info Are Pony Bottles Dangerous?

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I never understood this sentiment. Buddy diving is a two way street. Even with terrible and non-attentive buddies, I've never gotten separated. Why?
What kind of visibility and conditions?

Where I dive, I lose complete visibility of a buddy 3 feet away sometimes. I too haven't had buddy separation yet, because: 1) I mostly dive solo 2) I almost never dive with insta-buddies. 3) I spend the entire dive watching the buddy, which is not fun.

Some of the places I solo-dive have are actual zero-visibility, and others are close to it. You wouldn't even see your buddy 80% of the dive, if there were 12-inches away.
Is that fun? No
If it's not fun, I have better things to do with my time and money.
that's why I prefer better buddies.
That's nice. When you can always choose your buddies, and those buddies are reliable. For me, that would mean never diving.

So, instead, I take the most reliable dive-buddy of all, my redundant air.
So maybe the people saying this are not the most attentive themselves...
You're assuming negative characteristics about people you disagree with.
 
If someone is that freaked out about critical failures all the time and that’s all they think about the entire dive, that doesn’t sound like fun to me. I would find a new hobby.
I’ve dived with people like that whose entire lives revolved around “critical failures” and “what if’s”. They are no fun to be around.
I mentioned "PTSD insurance" (traumatic experiences attempting CESA from 90ft) but this is another major benefit. For example, the whole debate about swivels/elbows, flex-hoses, failure points, and so on is mostly irrelevant when I have redundant gas. Redundant air converts entire classes of problems are converted into minor annoyances.

I dive to enjoy myself. I dive to enjoy myself. It's nice not have even a hint of needing to check my gas every 15 seconds, stick to 30ft or less, and have a nagging feeling I'm seconds from drowning.

Could I CESA from 60ft? Probably most of the time. But maybe not if I have cramps, my buoyancy is fked, there's an entanglement, or I realize too late I need to start surfacing.
 
Where I dive, I lose complete visibility of a buddy 3 feet away sometimes. I too haven't had buddy separation yet, because: 1) I mostly dive solo 2) I almost never dive with insta-buddies. 3) I spend the entire dive watching the buddy, which is not fun.

Some of the places I solo-dive have are actual zero-visibility, and others are close to it. You wouldn't even see your buddy 80% of the dive, if there were 12-inches away.
So it would seem you're not doing typical recreational dives. I can see that zero-vis diving would be very different, although I can imagine ways to combat that if necessary (like touch contact). However, I don't think this applies to 99%+ of recreational dives. So what I object to is if you use your very special circumstances to make statements that imply the same sentiments would be valid for other people.

That's nice. When you can always choose your buddies, and those buddies are reliable. For me, that would mean never diving.

So, instead, I take the most reliable dive-buddy of all, my redundant air.
Fair enough. I understand why some people solo dive, even though I refrain from doing it. It's not that relevant when it comes to typical recreational diving, though.

Maybe. I was implying that these "negative characteristics" might be correlated with certain statements, as a generalization. I didn't try to or mean to directly attribute it to you. I think calling it an ad hominem is a stretch.
 
So what I object to is if you use your very special circumstances to make statements that imply the same sentiments would be valid for other people.
In the section you quoted, I made NO general statements. I made a contrasting statement to something you said, which sounded general.
However, I don't think this applies to 99%+ of recreational dives.
This looks like a general statement to me, applying to nearly all scuba diving.

1) The normal diving in my local lakes, if you avoid zero-vis spots, is 1-20ft (on a great day) visibility, and the drops in visibility can be sudden. Unless one diver is CONSTANTLY monitoring their buddy, staying as closely as possible, moving slowly, etc, then buddy separation is practically guaranteed. Almost all of the local lakes I'm aware of have similar visibility.

2) The stories of inattentive insta-buddies are everywhere, and practically everyone has that story. There's nothing rare about your insta-buddy just swimming off to look at something, paying no attention to their buddy they just left behind.

This isn't remotely rare, or close to 1%. Even 1% can be a big number, when it comes to accidents or incidents, especially across hundreds (or thousands) of dives.

One reason divers run out of air, is because of something their buddy does. Perhaps their buddy swim-swim-swims like crazy, and you get a workout trying to keep up using more air. Perhaps the buddy wants to go deeper than expected. Perhaps the buddy doesn't want to surface. The are other examples, that follow the basic pattern of the unpredictable insta-buddy throws off your dive plan and air-usage. And that same unreliable insta-buddy, just might be the one that swam off with your redundant air, or perhaps has none left for you because they used theirs too.
 
then you need to at least dive 3rds on top of the reserve and take into account that your buddy might need more air than you,
That's asinine. 3rds plus a further reserve? Again, we're talking open water rec diving. Once you got the air sharing button you're going up to a stop and swimming in shallow or to the surface of safe to do so. 2 divers swimming at 15-20ft can make a small reserve go a long way. Breathe the tank down, shoot a bag. Go up once you're below 500 psi. Easy peasy
 
That's asinine. 3rds plus a further reserve? Again, we're talking open water rec diving. Once you got the air sharing button you're going up to a stop and swimming in shallow or to the surface of safe to do so. 2 divers swimming at 15-20ft can make a small reserve go a long way. Breathe the tank down, shoot a bag. Go up once you're below 500 psi. Easy peasy
Nice try selectively quoting. Here is the full quote, try reading it again:
If you "must return to the starting point at all costs" then you need to at least dive 3rds on top of the reserve and take into account that your buddy might need more air than you, is there current, other obstacles etc.
Obviously this almost never happens in recreational diving, which is why 3rds is not very relevant. If I plan on returning to the start point of the dive, I dive 1/2 + reserve. If **** happens I could always surface before returning.
 
Nice try selectively quoting. Here is the full quote, try reading it again:

Obviously this almost never happens in recreational diving, which is why 3rds is not very relevant. If I plan on returning to the start point of the dive, I dive 1/2 + reserve. If **** happens I could always surface before returning.
It was selective to point out the ridiculous nature of that statement. Open water, rec diving. You're getting distracted with your gue/dir mandates. Diving 3rds with a reserve in OW single tank is like wearing a condom after getting a vasectomy and being celibate...
 
Hint: If you have to selectively quote to make a statement sound ridiculous, maybe you're missing the point.

I'll add the most important part of the quote, then, since you seem so adamant to try to create a straw man:
The rest of the gas you can use as you see fit. If you "must return to the starting point at all costs" then you need to at least dive 3rds on top of the reserve and take into account that your buddy might need more air than you, is there current, other obstacles etc.
My point was, and has always been, that diving 3rds for recreational diving is almost never necessary. I only added the last part to pre-empt people nitpicking about hypothetical situations. For most of my dives I don't even have a turn pressure, but I always have a gas reserve, which is the important part.
 
Nice try selectively quoting. Here is the full quote, try reading it again:

Obviously this almost never happens in recreational diving, which is why 3rds is not very relevant. If I plan on returning to the start point of the dive, I dive 1/2 + reserve. If **** happens I could always surface before returning.
Uh it happens frequently here when you dive close to shipping lanes?
 

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