Nikki McAllen
Registered
Thought this topic justified a new thread. It's a barely mentioned yet extremely important aspect of diver health.
In some schools there seems a 'culture' of teaching students to 'whistle' the regulator dust caps dry. In an experienced hand with decent valve control this can be done reasonably quietly, even though there is absolutely no longer any reason to do so. Simply blowing forcefully into the cap is enough to drive the water out, you can even feel it spray your lips. Better yet, use a filled style cap. Best yet, use an Apeks style Ball cap and you don't have to do anything.
I've asked numerous highly trained tech repair people if this is necessary and every single one said it's not. In fact, you can do this a hundred times and negate it all with one forgetful moment that you didn't remember to purge the tank valve before assembling your regulator. Even that's not so bad anymore with the new gear, according to them.
The noise coming out from a scuba tank is by all definitions an EXPLOSION headed for your face. It's waaaay past any Decibel meters range I've been able to find and the frequency is up there like a dog-whistle. This is extremely damaging to the ears and over time WILL cause loss of hearing. Even the purging second stages can be terribly loud.
There is a simple solution: Train your students of this risk. Teach them to cover the tank valve during the purge and face that reflected noise out to sea where most of it will remain. Tell them that purging a regulator facing their buddy is like throwing sand in their face. Let them know that good regulator care begins with the assembly sequence, not the disassembly.
Diving is hard enough on the ears. Add boat noise and hearing loss becomes a very real danger to the diving public. People who add air blasts to this already noisy environment will be reading the text on their television when they are fifty I guarantee it. I know this because I am, and it stinks.
Any dive instructor who practices or teaches damaging practices like drying their sunglasses / dust caps with prolonged air blasts should be schooled. Nobody has the right to damage anyone else's ears just because they happen to be on the same boat.
In my opinion it's an aggressive act not much different than kicking someone in the shins to knock the mud off their boots !
In some schools there seems a 'culture' of teaching students to 'whistle' the regulator dust caps dry. In an experienced hand with decent valve control this can be done reasonably quietly, even though there is absolutely no longer any reason to do so. Simply blowing forcefully into the cap is enough to drive the water out, you can even feel it spray your lips. Better yet, use a filled style cap. Best yet, use an Apeks style Ball cap and you don't have to do anything.
I've asked numerous highly trained tech repair people if this is necessary and every single one said it's not. In fact, you can do this a hundred times and negate it all with one forgetful moment that you didn't remember to purge the tank valve before assembling your regulator. Even that's not so bad anymore with the new gear, according to them.
The noise coming out from a scuba tank is by all definitions an EXPLOSION headed for your face. It's waaaay past any Decibel meters range I've been able to find and the frequency is up there like a dog-whistle. This is extremely damaging to the ears and over time WILL cause loss of hearing. Even the purging second stages can be terribly loud.
There is a simple solution: Train your students of this risk. Teach them to cover the tank valve during the purge and face that reflected noise out to sea where most of it will remain. Tell them that purging a regulator facing their buddy is like throwing sand in their face. Let them know that good regulator care begins with the assembly sequence, not the disassembly.
Diving is hard enough on the ears. Add boat noise and hearing loss becomes a very real danger to the diving public. People who add air blasts to this already noisy environment will be reading the text on their television when they are fifty I guarantee it. I know this because I am, and it stinks.
Any dive instructor who practices or teaches damaging practices like drying their sunglasses / dust caps with prolonged air blasts should be schooled. Nobody has the right to damage anyone else's ears just because they happen to be on the same boat.
In my opinion it's an aggressive act not much different than kicking someone in the shins to knock the mud off their boots !