Doubt I'll ever had occasion to take the course, but for those researching it who run across this thread (plus I'm curious), I'd like clarification on some things.
1.) For someone seeking a recreational pass, with intend to only dive recreationally, as long as he's got a BP/W BCD and his regulator is set up with a long hose for primary donate, is that all the gear mandated? Anything else goes?
blade fins, orally inflatable DSMB with spool, canister light with hard Goodman handle (many people borrow one).
2.) When I see GUE Fundamentals lauded on ScubaBoard, or sought after, it's nearly always in terms of enhancing personal dive skills. I'm aware GUE is big on the 'team diving' approach, but that's not the reason I see most people seeking it out.
I see it as learning about diving in a team, how to cooperate, positioning etc.
The value to me is the skills.
So, how much 'team' content is involved in the course? If a solo diver, or other diver with no expectation of diving with other GUE divers and a fairly lax view on the buddy system, how much team content would he have to slog through?
Its mixed in throughout the course. From surface swimming together as a team, descending together facing each other in a circle (unless in a current, then into a current), positioning in the water to stay together.
3.) In real world personal diving long after the course, what things change about your recreational diving? Buoyancy control and finning techniques, judging from what's been posted, but what else? Are there things they teach that most people let fall by the wayside in diving?,
Again for me, it is the skills for efficient diving: trim, proper weighting, controlled ascents/descents, task loading for ascents.
I'm asking my questions in an effort to get a sense of how 2 potentially competing agendas come together; what the student diver wishes to learn, and what GUE wants them to learn. There's probably a lot of overlap, but maybe not total?
Fundies was developed by AG because GUE was forced to address insufficient skillset so often in GUE's tech courses. It is probably one of the biggest events in scuba training history and quality skills were objective and standardized. There isn't that much wiggle room for "mastery".
If a student doesn't care about team diving but does care about skills (which should be eveyrone), they will benefit enormously from the course. Down the line if they ever change their mind and get into technical diving, they at least have some exposure to team diving.
I wish all dive agencies required something like GUE fundies rec passes for all recreational dive pros, tech passes for tech instructors. It is pretty abysmal what I see there for tech instruction in my area more often than not.