halocline
Contributor
I won't say that it's impossible that I went into the water with the valve mostly closed. Mistakes happen. However, I've made almost 250 dives and never done that before. I was taught to open the valve all the way and then back it off 1/4 turn. In this case, I am 95% certain that it was open.
The needle didn't move until the pressure in the tank got low. As I understand it, if the valve were closed part way, the needle would move at any pressure. Or is that not correct? If it was a dumb@ss mistake on my part, I want to be reasonably certain. I can correct that, but I'd like to have faith in my gear.
I believe you did have the valve open. If the valve was almost entirely closed, you would have had problems far earlier than 52 minutes into the dive. I think it's HIGHLY unlikely that you turned (rolled) the valve off without knowing it, unless you were in a very tight spot, and I have a feeling you would have mentioned that.
A couple of questions:
1) Did you ever check the tank after the dive with another reg set? If so, did it breathe normally and how much gas was in the tank? I think that's pretty important info. Maybe something happened to the valve, I have no idea. But, if the tank is still around, check it out. If there's no air in it, probably what happened was that your SPG stopped working and you were basically out of air, that's why you couldn't get any. That would also explain the feeling that you thought you were so great on air consumption; you weren't, but your SPG wasn't working.
2) What exactly did the guy at the shop mean by "too much pressure in the 1st stage?" I assume he hooked it up to an IP gauge and that your IP was too high. Did he give you a number? If your IP spiked during the dive, you probably would have had a nasty freeflow instead of losing air supply to the 2nd stage. So it doesn't make sense to me. If I had to guess, I would suspect that your IP might be too high but it doesn't have anything to do with your problem on the dive.