Similarly, I'd like to hear just what conditions towing a torpedo is good for. I've never seen it done and can't quite grasp doing it in any kind of current - even with 200' of line on my SMB, if theres a current, it goes horizontal long before reaching the surface (deployment depth depending of course)
So hows this done?
Ok, thanks for the honest question.....
See the float....
Riffe Torpedo Float
You normally want to use a cave reel to tow with, but there is one more key alteration to use these...they were originally intended to be attached to fish on a spear....so they don't come optimized for diving.
What you need to do is to have the cave line attach to a point about 1/3 of the way back from the nose, under the torpedo....this was, when you are 100 feet down, or 200 feet down in a current, and the torpedo is behind you with a 20 to 60 degree angle in the line--whatever you let out, and the response with swimming or current.....the line is going to pull down on the torpedo, and you DO NOT want the nose of the torpedo to be pulled straight down---you want the downward force to be averaged along the "keel" of the torpedo......but also in the front 1/3 area, so it tracks straight with you and does not turn any way it wants to.
We can be on a 100 foot dive in a screaming current, and with the thin cave line, the pull is negligible....where-as the typical dive float and yellow polypropylene line would be pulling you so hard it can be like water skiing on the bottom.
On some of our more major tech excursions to 280ft off of Palm Beach, we would use scooters, and the strongest scooter would be the one towing the torpedo....with all the huge amount of line out on a dive like this, there is some pull on the line I did not enjoy having to pull through out a swimming tech dive at 280ft--but with the scooter it is a non-issue. And again, for 130 or less, there is very little effort---and you can have a hook on the cave reel, so you can hook off if you get to an interesting area along a multi-mile long drift dive..as many times as this happens. For u/w video, it is better to be able to hook off and be absolutely unencumbered, and to not get any jerks that could show up as "Shake" in the video.
And..as to the effort of towing and how slight this really is....take a float like this on a cave reel.....and with the dive boat going full speed say 20 mph.....toss the torpedo off the back with about 20 feet of line paid out....the torpedo flies along the surface, and is easy to hold onto.....Try this with a dive flag and yellow line--and someone else better be holding you, because you could get yanked right off the back of the boat the instant it hits the water--
The streamlining of the torpedo makes all the difference. This allows us to do drift dives where between the current and our swimming, we can cover MANY miles of reefs on a single dive....and even FIND wrecks no one knew were there before ( as in patch reef areas not frequently dived on ).
[video=youtube_share;_-UIObxXIfU]http://youtu.be/_-UIObxXIfU[/video]
Shallow pretty reef you would drift with a torpedo float ( pulled by my scooter in this case) We covered about a mile, and the boat comes to us when we surface, no matter how far this is from the start point.
[video=youtube_share;GH7_q5ACzXA]http://youtu.be/GH7_q5ACzXA[/video]
Juno Reef with a bunch of other divers....a DM was towing the float.
This is a dive where you are going more than a mile, pretty much every time you do this dive

And that's a '"good thing ".