Large tanks.

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

RDRINK25

Contributor
Messages
842
Reaction score
48
Location
Covington, Ga
# of dives
200 - 499
I have booked with CCV Oct 24-31 and was looking for 2 larger tanks for my self. My dive partner is a 5'0 mermaid that dosent breathe. Recently on trip to Hawaii she was always the last person on the boat with 1000 psi. She was forced to take steel 78's so the DM could keep up with her. I can not keep up with her I cpuls have a steel 120 and she would still have more air. I have hear CCV has a set or 2 of 100's? I would pay for them just wondering on how to get them and if Nitrox would be available with them?
 
I always check these questions with the dive center providing my tanks for the trip. They are the only ones who really know. Why not drop them an e-mail?
 
In the case of Coco View, the above answer has some permutations.

To contact the resort itself for questions about dive operations only toss an email to diveops@cocoviewresort.com

Understand that this address handles the day-to-day dive operations. Exceptions and more unusual equipment requests are sometimes furnished by the on-site PADI dive shop that is independent from the resort, but your answer should be seamless.

I'm buying you a beer if "your Mermaid's" SAC rate is better than that of a CCV DM. This aint Hawaii. These guys regularly use the same tank while leading two dives, then exchanging it with 1200 psi still in it.

The on-site dive shop (Dockside Dive Center), at your request, can likely "fix" most anyone's high air consumption issues. Most of us never take advantage of a skilled instructor's advice. If not that- it's amazing what you can learn from a quick video of yourself- if you understand what you are seeing. Patty, the owner and lead Instructor, pretty-much-so wrote the book on Peak Performance Buoyancy. Most divers will not stop long enough to consider these essential skills that can greatly improve BTs.

Most divers reflect on their CCV experience very fondly. After hearing many years of these comments, I draw a larger inference: for many, CCV had been a real transformational experience. The things we can learn from others, from the environment (if one is aware), can change everything that "we knew we knew". Some call it "zen", I lean more toward the agnostic "physics". Whatever!

Your desired effect may fall victim to the realities of maximum tank pressures of 100s (2400?) and the plain fact that CCV compressors are going to stop at 3000psi even if tanks are (very unlikely) rated at 3400.

Your dive profile here at the South side of Roatan will allow you to do something you likely have never done before. The dive profiles are extremely shallow. Most dives I run at about 55fsw maximum- that's where all the interesting stuff is. Dive #1 and #3 of the day are "moored" dives and divers are requested to limit their BTs to 1hr +/- so it will likely have no bearing on you if you dive smart and stay shallow.

But, it begs the question- if your BTs are predictably short, why nitrox at all, with 100cf or 80cf?
 
Not saying she would out dive DMs at CoCo. Was just stating what happend recently in Hawaii. When you are down for 2hrs its time to come up either way. I will take you up on that beer if for a small chance she does tho.

I am not asking to fix my air consumption. I was asking for larger tanks. I dive once a month at least and am not someone looking for advice on how to improve my air.

I dont want to have a limited profie and would prefer larger tanks with EAN. If they dont have them it is not a big deal but did read somewhere that they had a set to use.

I will try the emails above and see if I can get some answers.

Thanks all
 
Simply out of curiosity, why is nitrox any type of priority with the types or profiles generally done at CCV?
 
I guess I am un aware of the dive profiles at CCV? I am assuming to be diving 3-4 times a day or more when available. Why not is the real question? Are you saying there is not a chance to push the limits? If so I guess I am misinformed and would to here more about the profiles.
 
Plenty of Chances to push the limits if that is what you enjoy but no reason to, if quality scuba diving is what you seek, And if only doing 3-4 dives a day it's even less likely to have any benefit whatsoever
 
WHy do they offer it then? To take advantage of all the un knowing?
 
WHy do they offer it then? To take advantage of all the un knowing?

It's more an issue of consumer demand.

[waste of bandwidth]

{A related side-story: For many years, CCV had the Cabanas as open-air, non AC rooms. They heard a demand from statements by visitors that these units be made AC. They closed up all of the ventilation windows with glass, and plugged in the AC. In my estimation, the worst thing they ever did. I can sweat at the drop of a hat, but I never needed AC in the rooms, a fan was fine but only on some very hot days. Now, because of consumer perception and demand of competition, the rooms are now sealed off from the environment. Not much different than how nitrox evolved.}

This thread is now more a discussion of the efficacy and use of nitrox as a tool for use when appropriate. (versus just insisting on it).

I do understand that what I am saying is SCUBA heresy and may well generate derisive comments. BlueHouse is used to that, I however am rather thin skinned and my feelings are hurt easily, so don't flame too hard, y'all.

Feeling frisky and other anecdotal nitrox benefits aside, I can tell you some basic facts that I have noted over many return trips to the specific South side environs of CCV.

I have a very conservative wrist mount dive computer, well- 3 of them actually. (all different but equally restrictive)

Here's my approximate daily (South side) CCV dive schedule, on air:

#1 08:40 - 09:40 (max 75fsw, avg 45fsw)
#2 10:10 - 11:10 (max 55fsw, avg 35fsw)
#3 14:10 - 15:10 (max 65fsw, avg 40fsw)
#4 15:45 - 17:00 (max 45fsw, avg 30fsw) sometimes BTs of 2 hrs
#5 20:00 - 21:00 (max 55fsw, avg 25fsw)
#6 21:45 - 22:45 (max 25fsw, avg 9fsw)

Shallow? You bet. After so many dives on Roatan's South shore, I can tell you, that's where the cool stuff resides.

There is precious little that resides beyond 55fsw to attract me there unless someone is pointing frantically at something and making an appropriate critter signal.

The two deep profile dives, as required by reef architecture, are Calvins Crack and Mary's Place- both easily slot into the parameters of my dive #1 as above, exactly as how they will be presented to you- first dive of the day.

Again, my redundant dive computers were either "born" as stupidly conservative or I have them set that way. After diving at CCV on repeated return trips (2475 dives there, give or take), I have hit "Yellow" pixels only once, owing a 3 minute stop at 20fsw. Once. On air.

Nitrox grew into a life of it's own in the SCUBA industry. Those of us who were there when it was first presented and marketed to the public (We just saw it happen, unlike Al Gore who actually invented it himself). It is well discussed in other threads how it evolved from something frightening, to it being embraced by profit hungry SCUBA LDS, to it being a perceived requirement by divers for every dive, all the time. That just isn't how it started, what it was designed for, or any of that stuff.

That said, there is not one LDS that doesn't promote its use.

You can write it off to eccentricity on my part, but I always snicker a bit when I see the word nitrox being capitalized. It makes me wonder from the outset... how much else have we gotten wrong?

Use it if you like, I certainly do when the dive (or schedule) requires it.

[/waste of bandwidth]
 
Last edited:

Back
Top Bottom