OP
hollydayver
New
First of all; thank you for all the prompt and numerous answers. I will take every advice into consideration. It clarified some of the issues I had.
Sorry if some of my questions or opinions were a bit naïve or dumb, I am completely new to tech, and to this forum and still looking around for info. Thank you for being patient with a newbie.
LEARNING
Rhone Man “You sound like a category 2 to me. I was very much the same; I learned a lot doing tec classes (including learning things that I "didn't know that I didn't know"). I do relatively few tec dives today, but no regrets at all. “
boulderjohn “Iwhen I took my first technical diving course. It may have been the most humbling experience of my life. I was shocked to find how much more I needed to know about diving. I was shocked at the skills I needed to have and that I frankly never before even realized existed.”
japan-diver …….. I tell all my tech students that tech diving is a commitment of time and money but for those willing to commit the time and money it is very rewarding experience.
Thank you very much, very interesting contributions that made me pause and think. I saw for myself that at AOW I tough I had learned all there was to learn, but at the DM level; I felt I just scratched the surface. I guess it is more the lack of a structured learning environement, once I exaust courses, than actual diving knowledge that worries me. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and passion for this sport.
DIVE CENTERS
VooDooGasMan “I would get certified from Devon, he is a member and a mod here on scubaboard and in the phillippines. “
ddmattos “I would contact devondiver. He is tech instructor in Manila. “
Jax “As others said, contact DevonDiver. I think that, one-on-one, you'll get a better outlook on tech diving and any further advanced diving. “
DevonDiver I've never met a tech diver (including myself) who didn't find tech training a humbling experience.If/when you're in the Philippines, head up to Subic and do a dive/s with me. See if you feel there's more to learn.”
Thank you I will consider it. Your skills workshops seems very interesting. I will contact you for further details.
Kevrumbo “ In Puerto Galera Philippines, go to directly to Asia Divers/Techasia Dive-Ops and ask all your questions about tech training to Dave Ross or Sam Collett; they also have GUE Instructor Anders Kristensen in residence as well. . .”
Centrals “Hi Hollydayver, If you had made it to PG then you should visit Captain Gregg as well. Talk to Chuck and ask about diving beyond 200m. "Daddy" Paul Neilsen is another highly regarded technical instructor and he is also around PG. “
Thanks i will look into it. If I don’t do the whole tech series in one go, then GUE fundies is definitly on my list.
BORING
petrieps “You think diving is boring, yet you took the instructor course, and want to go tech. This does not compute. You dive for the wrong reasons.Take up a sport you like! “
TSandM “No, I don't think it is. I have seen people for whom a lot of the fun in diving is the challenge of taking classes. In general, they take a lot of classes, and within a few years, they're off doing something else for fun instead of diving.….It sounds as though you are looking for your "reason to keep diving", and hoping you'll find it in tech diving. Well, I can tell you that tech diving is just diving -- it's deeper, darker, often colder, more expensive and riskier, but it's just diving.”
Jax « I'm a little concerned about this: ". sounds like you are more in love with training than with actual diving. If you do not find diving exciting enough, maybe diversify to other sports?
Sorry maybe I wasn’t clear enough previously, it is not diving that I find boring, I find that just breating air at the bottom of a pool is exhilarating. it is “fun” diving… going and looking at fishes and corals and stuff. It seems always the same to me. I enjoy a lot of varied diving activities such as drift, night or macro…but just looking at a pretty view; for me that gets old real quickly.
I can only dive while I am on holiday, so I can only dive at or with the contribution of a dive center. Unfortunately dive centers usually offer either this or courses, and having exhausted most of the courses in rec diving, only the boring option is left…
COSTS
RTee “...this amount just represents a fraction of what it costs for tech diving as you have to consider training, equipment and then the cost associated with diving itself (gas (especially considering trimix), travel, etc). “
boulderjohn "IThat is a good starting point, but you should know that technical diving is pretty expensive, and if one class is a problem, then going the whole route will be an even bigger problem.”
I read in several places that tech was really expensive, but there are not a whole lot of details apart from equipment part of the equation, if you need to buy it….
Most dive site say just mention charges of THB2 or PHP2.5 per litter of He. What does that represent exactly?
For instance, say the mean price of a 2 dive boat dive trip is $70 with equipment rental; how much roughly would be the same trip if on trimix.?
SAFETY
TSandM “technical classes are challenges, and bring your skills and your coping abilities to a new level. But the risks involved in doing technical dives are not trivial. If you haven't thought about what you are going to do when your buddy is ill or injured or otherwise distressed or incapacitated, and you are facing an hour of mandatory deco that you'll have to blow off to take him to the surface, then you haven't really thought through 200 foot dives. “
spectrum “Your lack of interest in non training dives is in stark contrast to the underpinnings of the dive education systems. You are adding an elevated risk to a sport that can present considerable danger. I you seek thrills you are on a good path. “
boulderjohn “The issue is not going to 200 feet. Any idiot can do that. The issue is doing it for any useful length of time and being reasonably sure of coming back alive. If you just want to go to 200 feet and shoot back up, then, no, you don't all that training.”
red_barbarian “The negatives I'd say would be cost, time in keeping up the skills, and you will be disappointed at 80M to find out that although the reef diving environment is somewhat different down there quite often it's nicer shallower”
I am actually a very conservative diver, not into trills at all, I know it is much much better to develop with experience, but in my situation I just can’t. although I have done some higher risk dives such as deep or solo, I mostly dive in the safest environments above 20m…I am in no way a depth addict.
I don’t want to dive under 80m for the depth, what attracts me to deeper dives, is a very different ecosystem. I remember my first 40 m dives where the sandy bottoms seemed deserted and then discovering a whole new world populated with different species at that depth. So I would like to see how life and what amazing species are living down there.
If I was I trill seeker, I would dive more by just diving at home like most of you do. I don’t do this because where I live there are no dive centers, no other divers I know of, and not decompression chambers nearby. So I would have to dive solo, in uncharted territory, without any infrastructure and fill my air in dubious harbor diving type compressor facility that probably has never heard of filters, or valve replacement… (and if some poor underpaid harbor grease monkey dies from foul air while clearing the harbor of junk, too bad for him diving is risky; let’s hire another one….)
I keep hoping to see development of the dive industry in my area, but since I took my first classes in 1996, I saw a progressive decline rather than advancement in the area.
Speaking of SAFETY, my understanding is that nitrox and deco diving are safer than air diving, so where does the risk factor start climbing. Let’s say I forget about my desire to see what is there to see in the depths, which classes would increase my safety margin in diving?
All the ones before trimix? Or is it safest to take adv trimix and but only to dive shallow on a normoxic mix?
Sorry if some of my questions or opinions were a bit naïve or dumb, I am completely new to tech, and to this forum and still looking around for info. Thank you for being patient with a newbie.
LEARNING
Rhone Man “You sound like a category 2 to me. I was very much the same; I learned a lot doing tec classes (including learning things that I "didn't know that I didn't know"). I do relatively few tec dives today, but no regrets at all. “
boulderjohn “Iwhen I took my first technical diving course. It may have been the most humbling experience of my life. I was shocked to find how much more I needed to know about diving. I was shocked at the skills I needed to have and that I frankly never before even realized existed.”
japan-diver …….. I tell all my tech students that tech diving is a commitment of time and money but for those willing to commit the time and money it is very rewarding experience.
Thank you very much, very interesting contributions that made me pause and think. I saw for myself that at AOW I tough I had learned all there was to learn, but at the DM level; I felt I just scratched the surface. I guess it is more the lack of a structured learning environement, once I exaust courses, than actual diving knowledge that worries me. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and passion for this sport.
DIVE CENTERS
VooDooGasMan “I would get certified from Devon, he is a member and a mod here on scubaboard and in the phillippines. “
ddmattos “I would contact devondiver. He is tech instructor in Manila. “
Jax “As others said, contact DevonDiver. I think that, one-on-one, you'll get a better outlook on tech diving and any further advanced diving. “
DevonDiver I've never met a tech diver (including myself) who didn't find tech training a humbling experience.If/when you're in the Philippines, head up to Subic and do a dive/s with me. See if you feel there's more to learn.”
Thank you I will consider it. Your skills workshops seems very interesting. I will contact you for further details.
Kevrumbo “ In Puerto Galera Philippines, go to directly to Asia Divers/Techasia Dive-Ops and ask all your questions about tech training to Dave Ross or Sam Collett; they also have GUE Instructor Anders Kristensen in residence as well. . .”
Centrals “Hi Hollydayver, If you had made it to PG then you should visit Captain Gregg as well. Talk to Chuck and ask about diving beyond 200m. "Daddy" Paul Neilsen is another highly regarded technical instructor and he is also around PG. “
Thanks i will look into it. If I don’t do the whole tech series in one go, then GUE fundies is definitly on my list.
BORING
petrieps “You think diving is boring, yet you took the instructor course, and want to go tech. This does not compute. You dive for the wrong reasons.Take up a sport you like! “
TSandM “No, I don't think it is. I have seen people for whom a lot of the fun in diving is the challenge of taking classes. In general, they take a lot of classes, and within a few years, they're off doing something else for fun instead of diving.….It sounds as though you are looking for your "reason to keep diving", and hoping you'll find it in tech diving. Well, I can tell you that tech diving is just diving -- it's deeper, darker, often colder, more expensive and riskier, but it's just diving.”
Jax « I'm a little concerned about this: ". sounds like you are more in love with training than with actual diving. If you do not find diving exciting enough, maybe diversify to other sports?
Sorry maybe I wasn’t clear enough previously, it is not diving that I find boring, I find that just breating air at the bottom of a pool is exhilarating. it is “fun” diving… going and looking at fishes and corals and stuff. It seems always the same to me. I enjoy a lot of varied diving activities such as drift, night or macro…but just looking at a pretty view; for me that gets old real quickly.
I can only dive while I am on holiday, so I can only dive at or with the contribution of a dive center. Unfortunately dive centers usually offer either this or courses, and having exhausted most of the courses in rec diving, only the boring option is left…
COSTS
RTee “...this amount just represents a fraction of what it costs for tech diving as you have to consider training, equipment and then the cost associated with diving itself (gas (especially considering trimix), travel, etc). “
boulderjohn "IThat is a good starting point, but you should know that technical diving is pretty expensive, and if one class is a problem, then going the whole route will be an even bigger problem.”
I read in several places that tech was really expensive, but there are not a whole lot of details apart from equipment part of the equation, if you need to buy it….
Most dive site say just mention charges of THB2 or PHP2.5 per litter of He. What does that represent exactly?
For instance, say the mean price of a 2 dive boat dive trip is $70 with equipment rental; how much roughly would be the same trip if on trimix.?
SAFETY
TSandM “technical classes are challenges, and bring your skills and your coping abilities to a new level. But the risks involved in doing technical dives are not trivial. If you haven't thought about what you are going to do when your buddy is ill or injured or otherwise distressed or incapacitated, and you are facing an hour of mandatory deco that you'll have to blow off to take him to the surface, then you haven't really thought through 200 foot dives. “
spectrum “Your lack of interest in non training dives is in stark contrast to the underpinnings of the dive education systems. You are adding an elevated risk to a sport that can present considerable danger. I you seek thrills you are on a good path. “
boulderjohn “The issue is not going to 200 feet. Any idiot can do that. The issue is doing it for any useful length of time and being reasonably sure of coming back alive. If you just want to go to 200 feet and shoot back up, then, no, you don't all that training.”
red_barbarian “The negatives I'd say would be cost, time in keeping up the skills, and you will be disappointed at 80M to find out that although the reef diving environment is somewhat different down there quite often it's nicer shallower”
I am actually a very conservative diver, not into trills at all, I know it is much much better to develop with experience, but in my situation I just can’t. although I have done some higher risk dives such as deep or solo, I mostly dive in the safest environments above 20m…I am in no way a depth addict.
I don’t want to dive under 80m for the depth, what attracts me to deeper dives, is a very different ecosystem. I remember my first 40 m dives where the sandy bottoms seemed deserted and then discovering a whole new world populated with different species at that depth. So I would like to see how life and what amazing species are living down there.
If I was I trill seeker, I would dive more by just diving at home like most of you do. I don’t do this because where I live there are no dive centers, no other divers I know of, and not decompression chambers nearby. So I would have to dive solo, in uncharted territory, without any infrastructure and fill my air in dubious harbor diving type compressor facility that probably has never heard of filters, or valve replacement… (and if some poor underpaid harbor grease monkey dies from foul air while clearing the harbor of junk, too bad for him diving is risky; let’s hire another one….)
I keep hoping to see development of the dive industry in my area, but since I took my first classes in 1996, I saw a progressive decline rather than advancement in the area.
Speaking of SAFETY, my understanding is that nitrox and deco diving are safer than air diving, so where does the risk factor start climbing. Let’s say I forget about my desire to see what is there to see in the depths, which classes would increase my safety margin in diving?
All the ones before trimix? Or is it safest to take adv trimix and but only to dive shallow on a normoxic mix?