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My web site is out of date, and it needs a lot of work. The man I paid to do it fell down on the job.what I don't know is how much you charge for OW cert: your website doesn't say.
I can go all the way up in the 12' pool just taking a full breath.
Remember that the average person has 13 pounds of lift capacity in the lungs. If the diver is close to neutral at mid breath, they'll have -+ 6ish pounds of authority on tap to ascend or sink on demand. This is the average, nothing extraordinary.With no air in your BCD? That's a set of lungs you have!
A person using the whole of their lung capacity to avoid sinking is not neutrally buoyant in a practical diving sense. For actual diving you need to be able to pay attention to stuff other than buoyancy without losing control. Part of the point of slightly tricky midwater skills such as DSMB deployment is that they show whether a student is actually neutral or just maintaining their position in the water by trying really hard. If when they stop trying they sink they were not neutral.Remember that the average person has 13 pounds of lift capacity in the lungs. If the diver is close to neutral at mid breath, they'll have -+ 6ish pounds of authority on tap to ascend or sink on demand. This is the average, nothing extraordinary.
A person using the whole of their lung capacity to avoid sinking is not neutrally buoyant in a practical diving sense.
Remember that the average person has 13 pounds of lift capacity in the lungs. If the diver is close to neutral at mid breath, they'll have -+ 6ish pounds of authority on tap to ascend or sink on demand. This is the average, nothing extraordinary.
6 liters is 6 kg of distilled water at 4 C, by definition. That is 13.23 pounds. Salt water will be heavier by about 2.5%, but warm water will expand. I think the salt wins out though.The average male has a total capacity of 6 liters in their lungs which is 12.12# of lift total. The vital capacity, the largest volume of air that can be expelled from the lungs after taking the deepest breath, is only 3 to 5 liters ( 6# to 10# ) limits the volume used for variable buoyancy and breathing.
When I tested, which I have only done once, it seemed everyone else testing (combination of men and women divers) was coming up in the 5 to 7 liter range. I thought the average VC was 6 liters, as I had seen written in many places that the average lung capacity for humans is 6 liters.