MidOH
Banned
I get that. But I wanted to experience it that way as well.
Entanglement, or the odd chance Im dropping my rig on the way up.
Entanglement, or the odd chance Im dropping my rig on the way up.
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Neither are yellow fins.Not to standards.
Have you EVER made a serious post?Neither are yellow fins.
So would you have passed this student? Does it really matter if he did some things right, if he did some dangerous things wrong?so first of all i congratulate anyone who even understood the original post.
second, our shop starting doing horizontal cesa a long time ago so i have no issue with that.
what i would have an issue with is the fact that the diver was not exhaling. not at all.
i also do not support the idea of removing the reg from the mouth. i taught my students to NEVER take their reg out unless they have a working one to replace it.
and last, i personally would not encourage the idea of disconnecting the bc inflate hose. i understand you are trying to make sure they do not cheat but any instructor should be able to easily tell if they hit the inflate button.
i cannot recall if the diver had their right hand on a weight pocket. we teach one hand on hose, one on a pocket.
on the plus side it looked like they were neutral, they did have the hose in hand ready to dump as required to control ascent, they were looking where they were going, and they were moving at a nice easy pace. they also looked to be manually inflating at the surface.
sorry but was that a serious question? hard to tell these days. i would have thought my response was pretty clear.So would you have passed this student? Does it really matter if he did some things right, if he did some dangerous things wrong?
Thank you for your replyDepending upon your agency, it is a standards violation to remove the regulator from the mouth. This is pretty much true everywhere in the world. A thread a few years ago indicated that Belgium was the only place that still allowed CESAs with the regulator out. This practice followed a UHMS study that found that CESA was by far the number one exercise associated with student fatalities, and the diver inhaling water and drowning during the ascent was the primary reason.
A primary rule of performance instruction is to make the practice as much like the real life as possible. In real life, you absolutely want the OOA diver to keep the regulator in the mouth for two reasons.
In the real world, if the diver begins the OOA ascent while reasonably close to neutrally buoyant, then the air in the BCD will expand. In order to maintain control, the diver will need to learn to dump air during the ascent. Divers should never need to add air to the BCD to ascend, unless that have dumped too much too soon while overweighted.
- It will prevent the diver from inhaling water and drowning
- During the ascent, as ambient pressure decreases, the diver will be able to inhale air from the tank. That is only true if the regulator is in the mouth.