PfcAJ
Contributor
The H valve isn't the real problem. Its the lack of gas behind the valve. I distinctly remember being at or around the peanut restriction on a single al80, and thinking how far up a creek sans paddle I would be if something broke, or if I ended up off the line, or if my buddy had a real problem at some point during the exit.
The guys over at ADM did some testing of just how much gas was lost relative to time for various failures. A low pressure hose failure drained 14.45cuft in 15 seconds. That's a lot of gas in a short time span. 1/3 of a single 80 is about 25cuft. See what I mean about not having much gas to deal with problems? When that gauge is dropping and the pucker factor goes up, time is not your friend. And time is gas. But lets look past a dramatic failure. Think about 'time to solve a problem'. Lost buddy? Lost guideline? Siltout slowing your exit (you're intro, remember? I bet you're not a boss at zero vis exits just yet)? All these things take TIME, and time is exactly what you don't have when you're diving with a small reserve.
The reality of things is that an intro diver is probably not going to be a Zen master if an LP hose goes, or if they're lost off the line. Heck, I wouldn't be a Zen master, either! But being in a cave with a small reserve volume when you're brand new is just ASKING for it. Luckily, the cave diving community has kind of moved away from single tank intro diving, for the most part, and I think that's a good thing. I also consider the above situations not resulting in a fatality, but in a 'close call' and scaring someone away from cave diving. When you've got a bunch of gas, a moderate problem becomes an inconvenience, not an experience that ruins your diving career.
Learn to cave dive with a large volume on your back. Stack the odds in your favor, play it save, build some experience, get more training, then take it to the next level.
The guys over at ADM did some testing of just how much gas was lost relative to time for various failures. A low pressure hose failure drained 14.45cuft in 15 seconds. That's a lot of gas in a short time span. 1/3 of a single 80 is about 25cuft. See what I mean about not having much gas to deal with problems? When that gauge is dropping and the pucker factor goes up, time is not your friend. And time is gas. But lets look past a dramatic failure. Think about 'time to solve a problem'. Lost buddy? Lost guideline? Siltout slowing your exit (you're intro, remember? I bet you're not a boss at zero vis exits just yet)? All these things take TIME, and time is exactly what you don't have when you're diving with a small reserve.
The reality of things is that an intro diver is probably not going to be a Zen master if an LP hose goes, or if they're lost off the line. Heck, I wouldn't be a Zen master, either! But being in a cave with a small reserve volume when you're brand new is just ASKING for it. Luckily, the cave diving community has kind of moved away from single tank intro diving, for the most part, and I think that's a good thing. I also consider the above situations not resulting in a fatality, but in a 'close call' and scaring someone away from cave diving. When you've got a bunch of gas, a moderate problem becomes an inconvenience, not an experience that ruins your diving career.
Learn to cave dive with a large volume on your back. Stack the odds in your favor, play it save, build some experience, get more training, then take it to the next level.