Capt Jim Wyatt
Hanging at the 10 Foot Stop
Staff member
ScubaBoard Business Sponsor
ScubaBoard Sponsor
ScubaBoard Supporter
Scuba Instructor
Divemaster
Many instructors say dogmatic things
That is for sure....
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
Many instructors say dogmatic things
That's my old BCD that I had trouble venting off trapped air pocket. I'm now very happy with my Cressi TraveLight BCD. No more doing gymnastics just to get rid of the last trapped air at the shallow.I was using my Zeagle Ranger BCD, a model which then had two waist pockets only.
You are too kind, but your point is true: you can't expect an instructor with little or no clue or care about trim and buoyancy to impart such. I've taken a number of classes, where it seemed my skillset was superior to my instructor. That's not to toot my own horn (toot, toot), but was an indication that I needed a better instructor. There are a few peeps I owe my trim & buoyancy to: Reggie Ross, Jim Wyatt, Tom McCarthy and Mike Brady are the standouts. Of those three, I believe only @Capt Jim Wyatt and Tom McCarthy are still teaching. Yeah, I also owe it to ScubaBoard in general. Like dody, I tossed out ideas only to have them handed back to me in tatters. Sometimes I was partly right, mostly I still had a lot to learn. I still do.
Well. Isn't the purpose of a forum to share experiences? There are many well educated divers on SB. They might not realize that but they acutually educate me... when they stay civil.I am super impressed that you have come to a public forum with your story. We all learn when people do this, so thank you.
You have been given quite a bit of good advice about diving and what to do differently next time. I cannot add to any of that, yet I can add to some of the ideas shared about diving with a spouse. My wife and I have about 200+ dives together and we will debrief after many dives about one thing or another. A frequent topic early in our diving together was communication and expectations. We often invented our own underwater signals for specific things based on the previous dive during these debriefs.
These debriefs would also lead to some great conversations about expectations in certain situations, one of which is always signaling if each of us is OK prior to a swim through as well as establishing some signals regarding who will be first to enter. This sounds similar to what Kimela posted earlier. A great outcome of these debriefs and discussions are that they were great for our relationship (The Chairman mentioned this, too). We bonded over these debriefs and invented signals. They also helped establish the fact that we are a buddy team, rather than two divers with one of us "being in charge."
Amen, brother. Amen!I am going to paraphrase something you keep harping on in your sermons: Mastering buoyancy and trim equals fun diving! Buoyancy and trim are big issues for you, and it is not religious--it really is the key to fun diving.
If it ever happens to me again, I will better assess the situation. But honestly, I was scared.Let's look at your initial description of the event.
In that description, you said that early in the dive, while you still had plenty of air, you realized you were moving up, and you eventually reached the overhead at only 2 m of depth, which is very shallow. What would cause you to move up? You were becoming more buoyant, which happens due to expansion of gas at lesser ambient pressure (Boyle's Law). The closer you are to the surface, the more this happens. So what was expanding? It could be a wetsuit, but more likely it was the air in your BCD. This is extremely common with newer divers. The air in your BCD expands rapidly when you get near the surface, bringing you suddenly upward.
This does not suggest that you were underweighted. If you have enough air in the BCD for that to happen, you had more than enough weight, at least for that point in the dive (before air weight loss). Further, your struggles to get down strongly suggest the presence of expanded air trying to get you to the surface and being stopped from doing that by the overhead. When that happens, it can indeed be very difficult to descend, because you cannot easily get that bubble of air to the exit point. You can pull on dump valves all you want, but if that air is at a point higher than the dump valve, it isn't going anywhere.
So my diagnosis of the situation is that you had enough weight for the dive (at least at that point), and when you entered the overhead, you ascended somewhat. As you did, the air in the BCD expanded due to Boyle's Law and took you to the ceiling. Once there, you were unable to release air due to the fact that you were pinned to the ceiling and could not get the BCD air to an exit point.
Ok. That leads me to the next question. How can we make sure that we purge all the air out of the BCD?Let's look at your initial description of the event.
In that description, you said that early in the dive, while you still had plenty of air, you realized you were moving up, and you eventually reached the overhead at only 2 m of depth, which is very shallow. What would cause you to move up? You were becoming more buoyant, which happens due to expansion of gas at lesser ambient pressure (Boyle's Law). The closer you are to the surface, the more this happens. So what was expanding? It could be a wetsuit, but more likely it was the air in your BCD. This is extremely common with newer divers. The air in your BCD expands rapidly when you get near the surface, bringing you suddenly upward.
This does not suggest that you were underweighted. If you have enough air in the BCD for that to happen, you had more than enough weight, at least for that point in the dive (before air weight loss). Further, your struggles to get down strongly suggest the presence of expanded air trying to get you to the surface and being stopped from doing that by the overhead. When that happens, it can indeed be very difficult to descend, because you cannot easily get that bubble of air to the exit point. You can pull on dump valves all you want, but if that air is at a point higher than the dump valve, it isn't going anywhere.
So my diagnosis of the situation is that you had enough weight for the dive (at least at that point), and when you entered the overhead, you ascended somewhat. As you did, the air in the BCD expanded due to Boyle's Law and took you to the ceiling. Once there, you were unable to release air due to the fact that you were pinned to the ceiling and could not get the BCD air to an exit point.
Go a little head down and use the bottom dump.Ok. That leads me to the next question. How can we make sure that we purge all the air out of the BCD?