ScubaJE
New
I've been diving a long time, but when I stopped for a long break, BCDs barely invented yet (except for the orange horse shoe style!) and this is a question that has been puzzling me lately. My wife has been diving with the same gear, same weights for the last two years. She hasn't gained or lost body weight lately (she's been the same weight since I met her 45 years ago). About a month ago, she suddenly had difficulty with positive buoyancy. We were diving in Puerto Galera in the Philippines on our last dive of 3 days of daily diving and at the safety stop she suddenly began to surface. Our DM and I had to pull her down and we both tried her BCD dump valves and no air was released. We attributed it to a long dive that left her with just about 50 bar in her tank which was unusual for her. We generally surface when she has around 80-100 bar since I use up air faster than she does. About two weeks later, we were diving in Anilao also in the Philippines where she was getting advanced certifications (no flights that might have expanded her wetsuit), and she didn't have any issues with buoyancy. Two weeks later, we were again in Anilao and suddenly her buoyancy issues came back during two dives. On two occasions, I had to grab her fin and pull her down and so did the DM. She was trying to dump air and none was being released and I was also helping by checking her dump valves and no air was released.
I would be grateful for any ideas! Thanks in advance.
- Her gear has been the same for every dive she has done in about 80+ dives.
- Her body weight has been the same for at least 45 years (125 lbs... who wouldn't kill for that!)
- She wears a ScubaPro 3mm full wetsuit and booties, no gloves, no hood, two years old
- Her BCD is an Aqua Lung ProHD jacket style.
- She carries 10 lbs of weight distributed among the waist pockets and trim pockets.
- Her buoyancy control is usually pretty good. She is certified PADI AOW and did the Peak Performance Buoyancy specialty, so she is aware of buoyancy control. She is able to control buoyancy with breathing.
- Our gear is pretty meticulously maintained; her regs just had their annual servicing which we do every 6 months since we dive a lot. BCDs are thoroughly rinsed and flushed with fresh water after a day of diving and also drained of any water. No repairs or o-ring maintenance have been done to the BCD.
- The tanks she has used over the last month when this issue began came from different dive shops/resorts. Always air, not Nitrox.
- We have our own lead weights which we take with us on resort dives where no flying is involved. So weight discrepancies can be eliminated. The only thing supplied by the resorts are the tanks and air.
- Normally, she is slightly negatively buoyant below about 12 meters (40 feet), and pretty much neutrally buoyant at the safety stop with 60 to 100 bar of air remaining. This is by design as it's her preference.
- As expected, her BCD would release some air as she ascended. But even after releasing that air, we still had to hang on to her at the safety stops. No more air was releasing, no matter what her attitude was (upright for the top dump valves and the fill hose and rear-end up for the bladder dump valve at the bottom of the BCD. She also tried to press down on the waist area of the bladder to force any trapped air out.
- She had 90 and 100 bar (1300 to 1450 psi) respectively remaining in the cylinders after the two dives in Anilao and about 50 bar in Puerto Galera. On the dives in between that had no issues, her remaining air was about 90-100 bar also.
- Over the years, I only had a couple of occasions where I had self inflating BCDs, both were rentals and easily resolved by disconnecting the air hose from the BCD until I surfaced. So, later on the boat, we left her regulator attached to the tank and BCD, and with the tank valve open, waited about 15 minutes and checked for BCD self inflation. The tank pressure stayed the same, so self inflation does not seem to be the culprit.
- We normally dive with a group of instructors, a technical diver and DMs and except for adding weight for a solution, none of us can come up with a reasonable cause. My wife and one other female diver are the only ones that wear jacket style BCDs.
I would be grateful for any ideas! Thanks in advance.