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As one who's had to deal with a stuck-open valve more than once, I make sure mine's about a quarter turn off the stop. And it isn't just old valves...
As one who's had to deal with a stuck-open valve more than once, I make sure mine's about a quarter turn off the stop. And it isn't just old valves... last one was summer before last on a reasonably new Scubapro valve. It's a pain to have to sit there holding the purge valve until the tank's empty before you can switch tanks for the next dive.
Rick
This statement highlights one of the big changes in training (and in the way we dive) that has occured over the years. When I took Scuba initially, from the very first pool session the instructor turned the air off underwater at least once per session, and we had to turn it back on. The objective was to train us to automatically check the valve open at the first sign of breathing resistance, and that habit has stuck with me.I quarter turn my valve back but am rethinking it in light of various threads I've seen here. I can't see how the benefit of possibly having to purge a tank - PITA yeah but hey - compares to a potentially serious situation as depth increases.
This statement highlights one of the big changes in training (and in the way we dive) that has occured over the years. When I took Scuba initially, from the very first pool session the instructor turned the air off underwater at least once per session, and we had to turn it back on. The objective was to train us to automatically check the valve open at the first sign of breathing resistance, and that habit has stuck with me.
I don't shut my students' air off like in the good old days, but I do tell all my students... "If you dive long enough, sooner or later you will jump in with the air off, or nearly off. You'd best be able to reach your own tank valve."
Every year there is at least one fatality from someone jumping in with the tank valve off or nearly off, and instead of just reaching back and turning it on they end up a statistic.
Rick