616funQuote:
Originally Posted by sitdown248
616funThe Dunderberg on a single tank, no H valve, and I don't see any stage/deco bottle setup?
Wow. . .
I was on the dive, I was carrying a pony bottle, I think you assume too much without asking. We all know what happens when you assume...
Keep those thoughts up. I know the Dunderberg well. I'm pursuing technical training largely in part to dive her. A recreational diver has no business doing that dive.
You guys keep it up. Diving needs statistics to keep the boards alive and active with speculation as to what happened on the accident.
So go on. We'll see who's the ass...
I'm sorry to let you in on the little secret, we never went into decompression. As we all know there are no "set depths," everything is simply recommendations. Now, I'm not saying it's a baby dive with no dangers, anyone with half a brain could see there are obvious dangers, but saying recreational divers have no business diving that wreck is absurd.
I would just like to give a little breakdown of the dive. We descended my max depth was 133. The supposed limit for recreational divers is 130 ft, hmm... so I was 3 feet beyond that limit, did I break the recommendations? Yes, but I still never went into decompression. I surfaced with over 1000 psi left in my tank and guess what, I still had a pony bottle hanging on my chest.
If you dive the sand, then no, recreational divers probably shouldn't be doing it, but for us divers who have adequate breathing skills and buoyancy control we can decide how deep we're going to go and for how long.
It isn't very difficult to figure out. Even if, for example, someone free flowed, we would have 3 divers right there who could lend assistance including several who slung pony bottles.
Originally Posted by sitdown248
616funThe Dunderberg on a single tank, no H valve, and I don't see any stage/deco bottle setup?
Wow. . .
I was on the dive, I was carrying a pony bottle, I think you assume too much without asking. We all know what happens when you assume...
Keep those thoughts up. I know the Dunderberg well. I'm pursuing technical training largely in part to dive her. A recreational diver has no business doing that dive.
You guys keep it up. Diving needs statistics to keep the boards alive and active with speculation as to what happened on the accident.
So go on. We'll see who's the ass...
I'm sorry to let you in on the little secret, we never went into decompression. As we all know there are no "set depths," everything is simply recommendations. Now, I'm not saying it's a baby dive with no dangers, anyone with half a brain could see there are obvious dangers, but saying recreational divers have no business diving that wreck is absurd.
I would just like to give a little breakdown of the dive. We descended my max depth was 133. The supposed limit for recreational divers is 130 ft, hmm... so I was 3 feet beyond that limit, did I break the recommendations? Yes, but I still never went into decompression. I surfaced with over 1000 psi left in my tank and guess what, I still had a pony bottle hanging on my chest.
If you dive the sand, then no, recreational divers probably shouldn't be doing it, but for us divers who have adequate breathing skills and buoyancy control we can decide how deep we're going to go and for how long.
It isn't very difficult to figure out. Even if, for example, someone free flowed, we would have 3 divers right there who could lend assistance including several who slung pony bottles.