halocline
Contributor
So you don't think having gas to breath underwater is very important? Most folks think that is the prime directive!
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Of course, but obviously you do understand that gas is already available in the main tank. So is immediate access to the surface, or else it's not OW diving. Carrying a bailout bottle might make people 'feel' they're being 'safe' but in truth the sudden inability to get gas from the main tank is very very very very rare. Free flows are not, but with good dive planning and gas management, a free flow should NEVER result in OOA situations. Again, immediate access to the surface......
And it's not that I object to the use of a bailout bottle; a redundant gas supply is prudent in some diving situations. But it hardly makes solo diving safe simply by providing a solution to what is very unlikely to be a problem. My issue is not with the use of a bailout bottle, but the often implied (and sometimes outright stated) sentiment that a recreational diver with a bailout bottle is now ready for solo diving, or at least 'ersatz' solo diving. I'm sure that's not how this class is intended, it's just something that is commonly expressed in a variety of settings.
BTW, I did not intend to comment directly on the content of the class, although I can certainly see why my post would give that impression. What I intended was to simply express a general skepticism about PADI's involvement in a solo diving class. I have that skepticism for two reasons: 1)PADI has decried solo diving for so long, to the point where they still refuse to call their class 'solo', that it undermines their credibility in the specialty, at least to me. 2) I feel that solo diving has more in common with technical diving than recreational diving as taught by the major agencies. As such, I would be more comfortable taking (or recommending) a solo course taught by one of the technical agencies.
Now, certainly there are PADI instructors who are excellent, thorough, and fully committed to the idea of solo diving, and maybe you're one of them, but I would not say that that's the norm, based on my experience.