broncobowsher
Contributor
The Choptima guys thump there chest pretty good as well.
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Must have been really strange to..All objective reasons aside, yesterday I dove OC for the first time in 2 years. Have been solely diving my JJ all that time.
Pro's OC versus CCR:
- Simple, a lot less fuss kitting up.
- My lungs worked again, aka I could ascend and descend by changing lung capacity.
- It was fun to get back to my diving roots
Con's OC versus CCR:
- What I noticed was how noisy OC is. At the start of dive mostly noticed it. I got used to it later on, but it's still very loud compared to CC.
- Cold. I got quite a bit colder than with my CCR.
- Gas anxienty. Not really an issue using just half a 12l, but with my CCR I don't care about gas at all. It's a non issue with CCR.
In retrospect, will I choose on or the other? Nope, I like both of them for very specific reasons. The dive type will be the deciding factor which set I will use. It's a luxury to have that choice.
Cost *has* to be a considerable factor in the adoption of CCR in a recreational context.I started this thread to take the temp of where the rebreathers were at relative to open circuit. I think the very long projections on CCR becoming mainstream is going to happen a lot faster than many think. The first step is to make them reliable and moderately idiot proof. There is a ways to go on that, but it will come.
The big breakthrough will come when dive resorts start offering them as an option. and regular divers get to go on dives where they are engaging sea life with no bubbles. Watching sharks, turtles, seals etc. with no bubbles to spook the animals. Divers will go home and start shelling out money for them and reserving them on trips. The big dangers of them will be the ability to screw the pooch on deco. One of the saving graces of the traditional Al 80 is that most newbie divers can't stay down on an 80 long enough to get seriously into a serious deco obligation.
There was a time when everyone would think that mixed gasses were to complicated for the masses. Nitrox is almost ubiquitous and dive computers have pretty much made it idiot proof. Some types of diving with mixed gasses are still very technical with a limited appeal, but recreational diving with nitrox is no big deal.
I could see some variation of CCR becoming widely used by recreational divers. Technology will find a solution for the question of how to monitor CO2 scrubbing and make it pretty safe for all but the least competent of divers. Charters will start splitting off for the rebreather only excursions and those for open circuit crowd. I am pretty sure that is already true for some places.
Sorry, that number's way out. The website says $1850 for an OXYGEN rebreather.Initial cost would drop in volume. The RD1 Rebreather which restarted this thread goes for $2K + BPW setup now, and would be even less in volume.
I doubt it. Plenty of manufacturers have tried to push into the rec market over the last 30 years. They all failed.I think the very long projections on CCR becoming mainstream is going to happen a lot faster than many think. The first step is to make them reliable and moderately idiot proof.
It's not less expensive to dive CCR. It is way more complex and the gear is not sunk cost as most decent ccr can be sold without losing that much money.It is less expensive too dive my CCR than to dive nitrox. It's not complex at all. Training and gear is a sunk cost.
absolutely, among other things. The two highest risk phases of any dive are the first 20', and the last 20'. These tend to be the most task loaded (transitions to/from water, fixing tools/accessories, riding out decompression, dealing with surge/waves, etc). On rebreathers, this is also where the hypoxia accidents tend to occur. Instructing to operate there in the shallows, both mechanically and physiologically, addresses the bulk of what a well tuned rebreather diver should be proficient with. By teaching with O2 only, we can reduce the risk of hypoxia during training (with a good flush, another important skill), and just focus on how to manage the dive and the breathing atmosphereThis is a good observation, shallow water diving with some ups and downs is the hardest thing to do.