DaleC
Contributor
Dale C wrote
But Dale, what contact would your buddy have with you? And, what contact would you have with your buddy if YOU were the one below?
I always make it a point to confirm with my buddy that we will rendevous at our decided depth before descending. I actually only swim down vertically about 30-40 ft till my surface bouyancy is overcome then I usually change over to horizontal, turn lights on and begin slowing my descent, so the actual buddy seperation thing in real life doesn't happen

wait,
7 pages of replays and none says "Hey man what are you talking about?"
If I am descending I swim mostly vertical head down.
beeeeep.
wrong 1. in that position your bood flow go to increase pressure in your head, so' it's bad for ears equalization and dangerous.
wrong 2. why you swim? you consume more air. deflate the jaket and be horizontal, don't move.
If I am ascending I swim mostly vertical head up.
beeep
wrong 1. why the **** you swim vertical? deflate the jaket and just some kiks in diagonal. use your breathing to correct your bojancy.
wrong 2 if you are vertical you have a difference of pressure on your body, about 0.2 bar from your head to your feet, no good in hard diving
If I am swimming horizontal to the bottom I swim horizontally.
OK, 1 right
If I need to look up I assume a position that allows me to do it comfortably.
yes horizontal with your neck torwards back.
Always horizontal is for dead people.
Talking without knowing is for idiots.
"The horizontal position is often called prone, superman, or skydiver position. For a scuba diver, the horizontal trim is the most efficient way to move through the water. In addition, the horizontal trim provides vertical drag, helping divers maintain a constant depth."
I particularily like the part about talking without knowing is for idiots. Thanks for proving it. I don't have any problems equalizing and I'm not afraid to swim; that's why I'm in the water. If I wanted to "not move" I'd remain in bed.
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