So reality doesn't matter?If I see a diver using somebody's octopus, they are either out of air or had a regulator/tank issue.
It also means that it is time to come up and end the dive.
End of story
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So reality doesn't matter?If I see a diver using somebody's octopus, they are either out of air or had a regulator/tank issue.
It also means that it is time to come up and end the dive.
End of story
So reality doesn't matter?
You seem to be confusing opinions on best practice with the reality of what was happening in this incident. I never said what she was doing is best practice. My only point here is that we don't know the pressure in that person's tank. It is obviously your opinion that people should only share air in an OOA emergency, but it is clear that not everyone agrees with your opinion. You cannot say that in this incident she must have been OOA because that is the way you think things should be.Reality is if that is the way they were taught how to dive somebody needs to lose their diving instructor certification.
Reality is those two divers practicing this regularly as a way of diving are putting everybody else on the boat at risk
Reality is the dive operator should lose their ability to take customers out for not stopping this practice
Reality is after the first time I saw this, I'd be leading my own dive away from all of the incompetence
Reality is I can go through this thread and pick out every single one of you that I would never want to dive with
Reality is if that is the way they were taught how to dive somebody needs to lose their diving instructor certification.
Reality is those two divers practicing this regularly as a way of diving are putting everybody else on the boat at risk
Reality is the dive operator should lose their ability to take customers out for not stopping this practice
You cannot say that in this incident she must have been OOA because that is the way you think things should be
to continue a dive sharing air is another thing. and that is not a best practice.
could you explain the issues you see with the practice outlined in John's message
I'm not familiar with that particular dive operation but setting a 1 hour run time limit for recreational dives on a "cattle boat" open charter seems pretty reasonable. Most divers will run into gas or deco limits by about that time anyway. Allowing longer dives for random divers with questionable skills increases the risk that someone will get lost or bent or run out of gas. And in some places the surface conditions can deteriorate really fast: recovering divers in the middle of a squall can turn into a real CF. If you want to do longer dives then charter the whole boat with your friends and coordinate plans with the crew.I remember this LCBR rule. As well as their "1 hour only" rule. Their insistence on their "rules" is among the many reasons I haven't booked with Reef Divers since.
When I'm doing a recreational dive with a teammate who has high gas consumption but otherwise decent skills I'll pass them my long hose at the beginning of the dive and let them breathe off my tank(s) for a few minutes. It's really not a problem as long as everyone stays above minimum gas.Sharing air is for when there is a problem (OOA, regulator issue, tank issue etc), not to continue or extend your dive. When you are on your buddies octopus, you should be on your way to the safety stop / surface.