LiteHedded
Contributor
GUE instructors are absolutely prohibited from closing valves. My husband also tells me that PADI instructors are prohibited from closing valves. But it is not the case for all agencies.
I vividly remember a dive that began a relationship with an instructor that was incredibly developmental for me, Peter, and my friend Kirk. Kirk and I had already been through a completely unprecedented failure scenario we had not handled to the instructor's satisfaction. We then descended and I shot a bag and tied it off. Kirk moved off with the reel, and ignored the fact that I wasn't following him, because I couldn't -- my manifold had been wrapped in the upline. So, of course, Kirk got put out of gas, and came hightailing back to me to get some. I donated, and put my backup in my mouth, and there was nothing there. I had a moment of adrenaline rush, and then I looked at Kirk, who was clearly breathing off my right post regulator, so the only logical answer was that my left post was closed. I reached back and opened it, and felt enormously proud of myself for having thought the thing through.
It was a challenge with no precedent in my experience. I found it to be a growth event, causing increased confidence in my ability to cope with the unexpected. But I think you ought to know the people you are working with VERY well before you throw that kind of question to them, because I could easily have failed that scenario, and ended up in panic AND entangled. I completely understand why some agencies would prohibit the practice.
this is very true until you get to rb80. the valves aren't turned off but the injectors are closed and they will unplug your drive hoses so the effect is the same.
rebreather stops working and stops delivering gas into your pie hole