Again, I ask you, what problem is being solved? How many burst disc failures have happened during a dive? How many tank neck extrusions have happened during a dive? How many regulator failures have happened during a dive? Sure they are dramatic and the get all the press, but how many have actually happened?
As we banter about these scenarios, remember we are talking about the typical diver that hits the water maybe 20 times a year. Not the highly proficient, uber-skilled instructor that we all are
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Yes, you can donate the long hose to an OOA diver whether it is in your mouth or clipped off in an instant. But, as they say, ‘how long a minute is depends on which side of the bathroom door you are on’. For the average diver, donating from the mouth is the consistently fastest way of getting a reg to the OOA diver. Also, since we practice that during our s-drill we establish a level of muscle memory. You say you “discuss” the OOA scenario, do you practice it as part of your s-drill? Do you practice both methods? I do not care how good you are, there will be a time difference in the two methods in the real world.
Speaking of the s-drill, I know my regs are working properly, too, since they were checked by my teammate and myself prior to the dive. During the dive my primary confirms this with every breath and my secondary as well as my lpi works and no surprises on the SPG. I realize a properly stowed reg is not at freeflow risk, that is the same of all bungeed backups. It is the removal of the second stage from the mouth that presents the risk. A freeflowing second stage can dump a lot of gas quicker than you might think. I would prefer to avoid that possibility.
I am not a dir zealot, nor anti-sidemount, I just want to play all the cards face up so people can make an informed decision.