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...//... Since *all* (do any not?) of the classes after rec push redundancy, then perhaps the non-tech diver ought to pull him/herself up by her short hairs and figure out that there is a *reason* for it. ...//...
That is one of the reasons I've only and ever been suggesting a well-taught formal course. The instructor is likely to pull his students up a bit harder just to make the point.
...//... By cavalierly deciding there IS such a thing as 'lite' deco, and that it IS acceptable to have an overhead without redundancy, ...//...
I don't know where that came from, just reviewed my posts in this thread.
...//... the next step - which also requires and understanding of risk and risk management.
I still don't see the disconnect between my position and yours, isn't understanding risk and risk management concerning some divers' regular contact with the NDL what this is all about?
Maybe my tech training is causing me to miss the forest for the trees. I just can't get past statements like "I never bother with that area (of my dive computer) it always reads 99." -pretty obvious that the diver in question only watches his gas supply and depth. Giving this diver more gas would be pure foolishness. My question, starting in the original post, remains: would a course that demanded gas management and redundancy benefit a recreational diver that had no intention of going tech.
...//... There is no such thing as a diver deciding for only him- or herself to incur deco. That decision immediately impacts other divers in the area, and the boat, and the first responders . . . to think otherwise is short-sighted and juvenile.
Of course.