drbill:You don't have to exhale if, like President Clinton, you didn't inhale.



You crack me up.
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drbill:You don't have to exhale if, like President Clinton, you didn't inhale.
I think you'll find that "very high inspiratory pressures" are on the order of a few inches, not feet, of water pressure. So it's an apples to oranges comparison - no disparityTSandM:... We have ARDS patients on ventilators who require very high inspiratory pressures to inflate their lungs. They often get pneumothoraces, but they don't get air embolism. It's always bothered me, this disparity.
Empty BC and end-of-dive gas (for OW class, about 13CF - 500 psi in an 80) at the surface. This ensures the ability to remain neutral all the way to the surface and retain fine control over ascent rate all the way from the safety stop to the surface - which is, as has been previously said, the most critical part of the ascent w/r/t both DCS and overexpansion injuries. 13CF weighs about a pound, which you can easily handle with breath control - I wouldn't worry too much about the difference in 500 and 200 psi - about half a pound in an AL80.NJMike:Rick, what do you teach now?
My plan for my next dive was to try and get my bouyancy down at the end of the dive, with 200 lbs of air in the tank and an empty BC.
That way, for normal dives ending with 500 lbs psi, I'd be a little heavy.
You need a new BC... or a dry suit. What you describe is the wrong equipment for the dive, and I don't recommend your solution.TeddyDiver:True with one exception.
In cold water diving with neoprene exposure there's a risk of being negatively boyant at certain depth. Depending the volume of the wetsuit material and volume of the BC it can be as shallow as around 70'. The couple of pounds less ballast one would have in this case increases this depth to about 100'.
I'm unable to 'get' what you said in bold. Would you please explain it or say it diffrently?Since you only need to be in the 10' to 0 foot range for a minute or so, I'm willing to be weighted such that I'm breathing towards the empty end of my lung capacity during that final slow ascent.
As you breathe in and out your buoyancy will change by several pounds. Full lungs are much more buoyant than near empty lungs.I'm unable to 'get' what you said in bold. Would you please explain it or say it diffrently?charlie99:Since you only need to be in the 10' to 0 foot range for a minute or so, I'm willing to be weighted such that I'm breathing towards the empty end of my lung capacity during that final slow ascent.