Originally posted by CincyDiver
This skill [a fin pivot] has nothing to do with trim. This falls under establishing neutral bouyancy.
The fin pivot is to assist in establishing neutral buoyancy, but the fact that you can do it has EVERYTHING to do with trim. This is my point. You have to be trimmed wrong in order to do it.
Originally posted by CincyDiver
This information is straight from the PADI instructor manual. The next step after establishing neutral bouyancy is the neutral buoyancy swim. And I quote, "Emphasize that they're simulating swimming over a reef and that they must avoid contact with the bottom or sides." I won't disagree that there are bad instructors out there who don't point this out to their students. You have to start someplace and this is their first baby step of controlling buoyancy with their lungs.
Absolutely wonderful quote! And from the instructor manual no less! A perfect example of what PADI is teaching wrong. Swimming? You can overcome all sorts of poor, lets call it static trim if youre swimming! While swimming you can supply a downward vector to keep your heavy legs off the bottom. Dynamic trim is easy, but tiring, since you HAVE to swim in order to maintain horizontal trim. Now STOP swimming and see what happens: Your legs drop down on the bottom. Your trim when swimming has zippo to do with your static trim. But, thanks to your quote we all know thats what PADI is teaching. Just ducky.
Originally posted by CincyDiver
I'm sorry but this makes no sense. I keep a horizontal attitude in the water, yet I can do a fin pivot. These are two separate things. See MikeFerrara's posts above.
It makes perfect sense. Youre PADI trained. You dont know what you dont know. You think that swimming trim is whats important and its not, its static trim. This is how you keep a horizontal attitude in the water and still do a fin pivot. Youre comparing your dynamic, swimming trim to your static, fin pivot trim. As for Mikes post, please read my reply above.
Originally posted by CincyDiver
I totally agree that horizontal trim is a skill for everyone. If your instructor does not teach this, find a new instructor.
So, are you? Maybe even a new agency?
Theres a even more to this, as well as an exercise to develop better buoyancy control and horizontal static trim in
http://www.scubaboard.com/t8232/s.html, I suggest interested folks go read that note.
Roak