scubacoz22
Contributor
Mark Vlahos:No, it was not safe.
A 160 foot dive is a decompression dive, if you did this on air without training you were in more jeopardy than you know. Gas management is important BECAUSE you need to account for a major failure and still get out safely.
I do not have v-planner available to me at this time, so I have not run the profile. Did you head directly to shallower depths and eventually the surface after the blowout or did you continue to look at the pretty fishes at 160 feet for a while before heading up?
If you had a major equipment failure like a blown high pressure hose on this dive you should have been happy to get back to the surface even if you started back up immediately. If your dive master continued the dive (to look at the pretty fishes) with your backgas depleted and only after the long continuation of the dive did you head for the surface, you should have gone out and immediately bought a lottery ticket. I think you do not know how lucky you, and the other divers in your party were, because they were at risk too.
One important role of gas management is to have enough gas to safely get back to the surface if you have a complete failure at the most critical part of the dive. It is expected on a dive like yours with a major failure like yours the dive is over, period.
Yikes, this thread is starting to scare me.
Mark Vlahos
No we did not continue to look at the fishes i wanted to go up she said to hold on and we gradually went up to shallower depths. but dove normally instead of going up played around at around 80 for a short time and then 60, 40 etc. We did do a 15 min safety stop at 15 feet. I would agree that we should of ended the dive, and was very surprised that we had not. It was very scarey. Something I never want to do again thats for sure. BTW that was back in 1999 in Cozumel with Aldora,tHAT WAS THE first time i had dove that deep, my last deep dive before that was 120 ft. but 160 is scarey.
Kathy