I tried very hard to understand this, but I am not sure I did. I will write a summary response to what I think you were trying to say.Ut is a daily thing adn it is justified by saying. If i do that i have to comply with training rules because it is a training issue. no training below x ft and that is al they will go to in that condition. If they are not in a role where a question of supervision required exosted they will go any where with you. '
In other words. If you want my sig and the instructor # we have to comply with agency rules which means you dont go past 60 ft because you have no experience and as an instructor they will not violate your RECOMMENDED limits and their training limits outide of an instructor environment. .
It boils down to you cant get a credit card with out history you can get history with our credit. Its a catch 22.
SSI when i dealt with them,,,, allowed sigs in a log book so long as it was from an instructor to negate the need to demonstrate abilities in a formal class at a later date. so you take a class do the tests but with he sig you did not have to go to a dive location to prove what you have already done as long as is was observed by an instructor . That defined the accountable level of an instructor to be the one to say you were profecient for formal training purposes. I got a boat cert and did not have to go to sea and jump off and get back on the boat to get it because i had several boat trips logged in my book. I watched another person ask his dive buddy instructor to sign his book as an instructor and the instructor refused to because he was not in an instructor capacity and not covered by the agency for a boat diving diving observation signature unless it6 weas a class and paid for it. It is not the issue of whether it is a boat sig or a photographer sig for the many bozo classes that are available. It is almost a level of hostility because of first dollars and the legit part is the liability factor with the agency.
I dont know of an instructor that does not think that a fresh OW HAS A LIMIT OF 130 AND NOTHING ELSE. Yet they the agency says recommended limit of 60 untill bla bla bla. that is talking out both sides of the mouth at the same time. Yes the recommended limit is a CYA for the agency and the number is a well thought of number. And I agree with it. Would it not be more honest to say your recreational limit is 130 and your personal limit is 60 untill you get further formal training to make you certifiable to 130,,,,, and the evil word experience. When the agency places a limit hard or recommended It should be the agency to lift that limit. Yes dive book proof should be the factor that causes the personal limit has been lifted. That says experience is not the same as training. Instructors sign off on training . So again who would be legally compitant erson or level to fill the requirements of some one that can say they observed you at 100 feet to qualify as proof of experience?????. Another OW that you took the class with? not proficiency neccessarily but experience. Profeciency is a more precise call that would be in a instructor realm. the difference would be ....been there did that but with out the did it WELL part that only an instructor should be able to evaluate.. for experience verification perhaps there should be somthing along the line of DM's can sign experience or perhaps MD's could to insure there is a level of compitancy to say you can REASONABLE accept the word of the signer as being profecient, that the person has the experience to do that dive as safe as one can with out formal training. Personally a MD or above should be able to do that.
This topic comes up often and I ,,as some know ,,am quite hard nosed about it. I have spent too much time putting tanks back on people at other than shallow depths to be comfortable with many mew OW's. Too many times having a diver with low gas because they never realized how fast you go through air in deep water. Foir me that answer lies in asking a lawyer wht statues would consider adaquate experience. You want to go to 130 ft. a lawyer would say the diverhad a card that proove he has the skills and profecience to sdo so at some time. so would an instructors signature or statement in a log book. how far down the training ladder do you go before it is said the person that signed of your experience dive had no clue what he was signing for. By that i mean someone with 100 dives may have seen a narc case or two and could recognize it before it was too late. If all the witness sig is saying is i was there he was there all is well, then you may as well have a book signing party after OW grad and then head out for the flower gardens or some other deep dive location.
1. Once you are out of the instructional environment, you are free to dive as you wish. Unless a dive operator adds special rules (like AOW for deep dives), you can pretty much dive anywhere. Who is going to stop you?
2. If you go to a place like Cozumel with your freshly printed OW card, you will routinely do first dives to depths between 60-90 feet. You will gain a lot of experience doing that. The DMs leading those dives will mostly be instructors. If you instead dive in a place with no DMs guiding you, it is just up to you and your buddy how deep you go.
3. It doesn't matter who signs your log book or if anyone signs your log book because the log book has very limited value in proving your experience level. Only a tiny percentage of later certifications call for a number of logged dives.
4. You generally use your judgment to determine if you have enough training and experience to do dives deeper than 60 feet. There are no agency rules stopping you from going deeper if you feel you are ready. That is, in fact, what the training agencies say to do.
4. Some operators require AOW for deeper dives. That is likely a requirement from their insurance company. It is not an agency requirement. You don't have to demonstrate skills. You don't have to show a logbook. You just have to show the card.