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@DCBC you won't find PADI OW divers trained in sub-surface rescue, gas management or a huge focus on buoyancy, it's not part of the course. ....
On what basis do you make this statement?
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@DCBC you won't find PADI OW divers trained in sub-surface rescue, gas management or a huge focus on buoyancy, it's not part of the course. ....
...//... PADI is finite in its time and cost, it's run as a business. NAUI is run as an organization for dive safety.
You have apparently accepted limitations that others do not. I am sorry to hear that.The same basis that you can find in any distributed OW manual. Right now the course currently focuses on surface tows/ swims for exhausted divers, very low gas management skills (maybe this is a difference in semantics*) and the basics of buoyancy and how to achieve it. I wouldn't call those focused topics because it wouldn't be in PADI's best interest to do so given they have PPB, Nitrox, Tech and Rescue courses available to teach you these things. I won't refer to what is in the NAUI manual, if anything because I have not read through it so I wouldn't know. I'm only speaking of PADI through the experience of myself and others.
I agree with you all, I'm not saying there aren't instructors who don't teach extended diving as parts of the course. I'm respectfully disagreeing with you by discussing what the standard course contains. Every course has its limits and time, that's why I think personally NAUI is more successful at allowing instructors to feasibly test revised limits with authority rather than a stern finger. That doesn't at all mean I don't agree with Quero that the limits and standards can be broken or grossly missed by instructors from other certifying bodies- I'd have to be clinically insane to think that. That's a topic for individuals imo, not the certifying body.
*I don't feel telling students to keep an eye on your SPG and return at 500PSI as 'gas planning'. I define it as learning about SAC's and being able to semi-accurately map out a single profile dive.
This statement indicates that you lack an understanding of PADI standards. PADI has both general standards and specific performance requirements. When people decry PADI "standards" as some in this thread do, they're generally referring only to specific performance requirements for individual courses. In fact, however, according to the general standards, PADI instructors are required to consider local conditions and prepare students accordingly. If students are unable to cope with these conditions, they will not pass the course, meaning, of course, that certification will be denied....only one will back you up if you're outside those standards in denying someone a certification for something extremely important based on local conditions.
I think the same terrible PADI divers would be those same bad divers through NAUI- the only difference being the ability to deny certification
Again, you display a lack of understanding of PADI standards. We PADI instructors are not required to certify "bad divers." If a student diver is bad, s/he will not demonstrate performance requirements as outlined in the standards and certification can justifiably be denied. You have specifically mentioned a) subsurface rescue, b) gas management, and c) buoyancy as areas where PADI divers will by definition be deficient (and by implication NAUI divers more likely to be better prepared)....you won't find PADI OW divers trained in sub-surface rescue, gas management or a huge focus on buoyancy, it's not part of the course.
This actually made me laugh, and since it's early morning here, thanks for getting my day started right! But getting back to the topic, leaving aside the implications behind this statement that PADI is uninterested in diver safety and NAUI is uninterested in profit (because neither of these points is true and simply don't merit serious consideration) this bit of your post may actually illustrate where you're continually going wrong in your analysis. Diver training is not simply agency standards as interpreted by instructors--there's a critical entity between those two that comes into play, and that is the dive shop. Yes, Virginia, even NAUI dive shops are run as businesses! In the end diver training by both NAUI and PADI instructors is driven in part by time and cost.PADI is finite in its time and cost, it's run as a business. NAUI is run as an organization for dive safety.
Just because it's not in the manual doesn't mean it's outside of standards. Looking at a PADI student manual will only give you performance requirements.The same basis that you can find in any distributed OW manual. Right now the course currently focuses on surface tows/ swims for exhausted divers, very low gas management skills (maybe this is a difference in semantics*) and the basics of buoyancy and how to achieve it.... I'm respectfully disagreeing with you by discussing what the standard course contains.
My main point in that regard really doesn't have much to do with the fact that there are poor instructors in all agencies. What I'm saying is twofold: firstly that agency affiliation doesn't promise a great instructor--a student diver under the tutelage of a NAUI instructor can just as easily be certified with poor gas planning, buoyancy, and rescue skills as can a diver certified by a PADI instructor. In my experience leading tons of fun divers, both resort-trained and LDS-trained, NAUI divers run out of air just as frequently as PADI divers do, just as many of them swim like seahorses at a 45° angle, and just as many bolt for the surface or stare dumbly at their buddy when a problem occurs; and secondly that agency affiliation does not indicate a low-quality instructor--a PADI instructor (like most of those who are posting in this thread) can be every bit as excellent as a NAUI instructor with a vaunted self-image (as some participating in this thread hold).That doesn't at all mean I don't agree with Quero that the limits and standards can be broken or grossly missed by instructors from other certifying bodies- I'd have to be clinically insane to think that. That's a topic for individuals imo, not the certifying body.
PADI is finite in its time and cost, it's run as a business. NAUI is run as an organization for dive safety.
Even a NAUI trained Bonaire diver on her sixth dive is likely to have significant issues diving in DCBC's back yard.
Do you think all the PADI instructors who have said over and over and over again that they teach gas management and focus on buoyancy are lying?
No I don't John, but this is to the credit of the Instructor not the Agency. Can you require a diver to do anything that's not in the Standards and withhold certification?