One LOA.
My wife and I were doing a night shore dive in Kauai and were quite a long way from the entry/egress point when she got stung by a jellyfish of some kind. Without realizing it, her breathing rapidly accelerated and had gone from about 1800psi to 800 in less than 5 minutes (in 40fsw). She signaled her air pressure to me, which I instantly knew was extremely low for her. I gave her my longhose and she signaled that she was ok to swim towards the exit, rather than make a direct ascent to the surface immediately. We did this until we hit 800psi on my tank, then started our ascent, surfaced, and swam in the rest of the way on the surface. The surface swim back seemed like forever though, as we were told there was a tiger shark sighting a few days previous and the last place we wanted to be at night was on the surface!
I've had one or two "semi-LOA" situations with students. They weren't technically LOA, but were a little lower than I preferred, and I had plenty of gas, so we shared mine on the way back in.
My wife and I were doing a night shore dive in Kauai and were quite a long way from the entry/egress point when she got stung by a jellyfish of some kind. Without realizing it, her breathing rapidly accelerated and had gone from about 1800psi to 800 in less than 5 minutes (in 40fsw). She signaled her air pressure to me, which I instantly knew was extremely low for her. I gave her my longhose and she signaled that she was ok to swim towards the exit, rather than make a direct ascent to the surface immediately. We did this until we hit 800psi on my tank, then started our ascent, surfaced, and swam in the rest of the way on the surface. The surface swim back seemed like forever though, as we were told there was a tiger shark sighting a few days previous and the last place we wanted to be at night was on the surface!
I've had one or two "semi-LOA" situations with students. They weren't technically LOA, but were a little lower than I preferred, and I had plenty of gas, so we shared mine on the way back in.