dannobee:
Wait a second peeps. We did this for YEARS before we even had SPG's. And J valves weren't always the answer. You could continue to suck air (albeit more difficult) through the J valve, only to pull the lever and find the tank empty.
Now, would I trust a noob to plan a dive, then dive their plan, who took all of their training while using an SPG? Nope. Of course she may have noticed that her 'ole man used his air twice as fast as her, so she thought she was ok, but what if something like a free-flowing octo happened to use up most of her air? Certainly not something I'd do, and not something I'd be bragging about to another noob. She should have thumbed it.
I'm sitting here reading this thread and I'm dumbfounded. Not because some "noob" went diving without a working pressure guage but becuase I'm reading the comments of experienced divers who think it's OK to share dive computers and dive without an SPG because we used to use J-Valves and should know how much air we use. :icon10:
It's really very simple. Cars never used to have seat belts, airbags or crumple zones. Does that mean we should remove the seat belts, turn off the airbags and weld the crumple zones rigid?
I don't mind taking risks (SCUBA diving is a risk) but I'm not going to take a stupid risk when I have no need to. If your SPG is not working, get it fixed before you go diving. If you computer fails, dive on tables NOT your buddies computer (or call the dive if you don't have tables or a backup timer, depth guage etc).
Is one dive so important that you will take unecessary risks?
Whats worse if you do take unecessary risks, why tell the world about it on a message board and risk some other impressionable person following your lead. Why not just keep it to yourself?
I really don't mean this to insult anyone becuase I understand where you are comming from. I used to dive years ago with the old stuff (J-valves, horse collar, etc.). But we did it then because there was no alternative (and we didn't know any better).
Don't forget, years ago you used to hear about people running out of air and dying relatively often. I can't remember the last time I heard about an out-of-air that wasn't cause by something else (like an entanglement). Most of the accidents I hear of today are heart attacks, AGE, deco sickness, not OOA.
Even DAN will tell you that although the number of incidents has stayed the same over the last 10 years the number of divers has dramatically increased (thus the accident rate has fallen dramatically). The number one change attributed to this decrease in accidents is gear, not training.
Just my opinion...please don't beat me up too much :11: