About CA or CESA from 30 m depth : continuation of post #29
It is extremely difficult to do even when you are prepared for it as part of an exercise. Also as a freediver you know that a freedive to 20m is a totally different animal to a ascent from 20 or 30m when you are stressed and out of air, wearing scuba. Performing this dive you are mentally and physically prepared. You breath up, you're wearing only fins, suit and mask, No drag, you're weighted to be buoyant from at least 5m deep. Compare that to an unexpected emergency swim when your heart rate is up and in addition you have the drag of bcd, regs and tank and you are weighted to keep you down comfortably at a 5m stop when your tank is low on air.
So there are different views on this. In Cousteau's case, these scuba beginners were selected twice.
1.) Every navy ship should have two scuba divers on board. It is not unlikely that this included spear fishermen or other freediver as well. 2.) Only the best of a course took this CA (CESA).
Let's start with buoyancy. A freediver has a total lung volume of 6 liters. At a depth of 5 meters, that's 4 liters, and at 30 meters, 1.5 liters. When he is equalized at 5 meters, he experiences 2.5 kg of neg buoyancy. If we add 0.5 kg for a thin neoprene suit, that makes 3 kg of neg buoyancy, and he will first be neutral again at a depth of 5 meters.
In the exercise, he starts neutrally and can very quickly stop swimming due to the expansion of air in his lungs and BCD.
In the worst-case emergency, he has completely exhaled and no air comes out. If he had taken 3 liters per breath beforehand and was balanced at a medium volume, he is only 1.5 kg too heavy.
The higher water resistance due to more diving gear is not so serious because the scuba diver should not swim to the surface too quickly due to the risk of DCS. That is the big problem, not reaching the surface like it is for the freediver.
The scuba diver has more oxygen in his blood plasma and other tissues, so the risk of an oxygen deficiency-related blackout is low. The CO2 may trouble him significantly, but a freediver, he can handle it.
The biggest advantage that the CA (CESA) scuba diver has over a freediver is that he only has to swim half the distance.
Now, if you consider all the advantages of the CA (CESA) diver compared to freediving, why were there incidents?
It seems to me as if with full scuba equipment the idea of holding your breath is not accepted by the mind of many scubadivers . The old Cousteau divers were in swimming trunks with 3 tanks, one regulator, mask, and fins. Water all around the body could enhance the diving reflex.
During a relaxed dive, I occasionally remove the regulator from my mouth and dive for a while without it. After all, my life shouldn’t always depend on scuba.
Before I climb out of the water with all the diving gear, I might still do two breath-holds.