Excellent write up rivers. You've really hit the nail on the head.
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Like i said, it's not mine. I stole it from Gareth Burrows' website divedir.com. he is a GUE instructor in the UK
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Excellent write up rivers. You've really hit the nail on the head.
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TC, you are the one making stuff up here.... When George used to do his table recitals, it was from the Navy Tables for Mixed Gas--that was what he started us with when he discovered how much safer and better Trimix was than deep air on our deep wrecks like the RB Johnson/coryn chris at 280. .........But this was just math...it was not anything he himself developed....BUT, then in the late 90's, when we were trying to optimize everything for deeper and longer penetrations, and with all the work on the Rebreather he was doing with my friend Jack Kellon---we began seeing a need for individualizing the tables , VO2 Max became a key component in how to individualize or what to use to key each individual, and with the help of Dr Bill Hamilton ( the guy most divers know created the dive tables what you use was based on), and with the help of Bill Mee ( a biomedical genius ) , George had custom tables developed for himself--which would later be keyed to others based on how their VO2 max related to his. George perfected these tables in every single deco dive he did, pushing the ascent profile to shorten each stop as much as possible--if he began feeling a discomfort coming on, he would go back to the stop previous, and re-adjust..ultimately, he perfected the tables for him. He would have me use the same tables he did, as I was a competitive cyclist at the time, with a VO2 max even higher than his, and on dives on the RB that other tech divers would spend an hour and a half, doing deco, we would do more like 40 minutes. With this set of tables, when George and JJ did the world record 3 mile penetration in to Wakulla, George did a 12 hour deco after 6 hours at 285 feet deep...JJ did 18 hours. Navy Spec Warfare began showing up at the big push dives, to see how George could manage such short deco's without injury--as this had military implications. To this day, if Bill and I want to do a tech dive, I am using the tables George had cut, and doing the shorter deco....it works well for me, and I feel great afterwards....and I don't need to carry the much larger volume of fast the standard tables would cause me to require with much longer ascent and deco periods.You mean that he guessed wildly and made stuff up as it came to him, in order to appear important and look like Super-Diverman!.
The idea that he's "developing" tables in his head is silly and preposterous. He did no such thing. Tables require complex calculation and more importantly, testing before they can be consided safe for use. All he did was make wild-ass guesses to support a dive profile he wanted to do.
No, it looks more like that was the work of the quieter, more respectful people around him, who tolerated him because they needed him for access to the cave, and spent more time apologizing for the people he infuriated. Seriously, have you read what he wrote to "get his message out"? And how is spewing vitrol at a dead person considered "getting his message out"? He got his instructor credentials yanked for that. How can you get your message out when you lose the tools that give you credibility and authority?
That isn't getting a message out, that's berating people just because he is in a position to do so, because he has a little control. It's called abuse of power and position.
He is not a kind person, nor is he someone that was going to pass up the opportunity to berate more people to promote his ideas. The idea that he wouldn't attack a rec. diver is beyond believeable for anyone who's read his own words.
No, it's because that is what has been dicated to use. Some of it fails the common sense test; for example, a continous loop harness. Single point of failure, have a cut in the harness, and the whole thing is useless. A strap system would be better. Second, why the black on all gear? Wouldn't the ability to be seen in low viz, or on the surface dicate that a high viz color be used? Yet, the inner SEAL in this movement dictates dark colors.
As has been stated, many DIR people have moved on to other systems, as they've found this isn't the end-all, be-all system that it's preached to be.
As for configuration; So what if one person's way is not consistant with everyone else? A left-handed diver needs gear on the other side. Yet this simple, common sense practice seems to violate the tenet of standardization that DIR preaches.
DIR gear is good for one approach; Tech diving; specifically caving. Beyond that, especially in rec. diving, it has no strong advantages.
They're no worse than any other fin. The technique used is the key. I see more bottom stirring from paddle fins than splits due to the greater downward thrust.
Because it adequately describes how DIR follows the rule laid down by others, some who've moved on from DIR, like they're gospel handed down from God...without the critical thought as to why the system is used this way.
And I'll own to a little wanting to dig at the DIR disciples. For a group convinced of their own superiority, they easily get defensive about criticism of their supposedly superior system.
What is that?
Are those DIR, PfcAJ?
So what is dan, then, DIR or a stroke? Seems you're one or the other to this club.
tech 1 and 2 are, for all intensive porpoises, non-penetration wreck diving courses.So what is the GUE/DIR protocol on descending to a wreck?
BTW, any GUE course on wreck diving?
tech 1 and 2 are, for all intensive porpoises, non-penetration wreck diving courses.
What about dolphins?![]()