When we start going there, we are playing fast and loose with the standards. For example we could have intro level divers going an awful lot of places outside the intent of the intro certification and the skills possessed at that level if they just start taking along a 1200' primary reel to maintain a single continuous guide line from OW.
You can play fast and loose with the technicalities, but the intro certification in essence means staying on the main line, not laying your own well past the light zone and the start of the main line, and a continuous guidline from OW to the catacombs does not in and of itself make it a good idea for an intro level diver.
I'd rather have an intro level diver intentionally stretch or break the limits and do so after careful and thoughtful consideration of the potential risks and consequences than I would have them push the "legal" limits to ridiculous extremes while deluding themselves that they are still within the limits of their certification and abilities just because they are still on a continuous line from OW. It is that kind of faulty thinking and rationalization that gets divers killed at any certification level.
You can play fast and loose with the technicalities, but the intro certification in essence means staying on the main line, not laying your own well past the light zone and the start of the main line, and a continuous guidline from OW to the catacombs does not in and of itself make it a good idea for an intro level diver.
I'd rather have an intro level diver intentionally stretch or break the limits and do so after careful and thoughtful consideration of the potential risks and consequences than I would have them push the "legal" limits to ridiculous extremes while deluding themselves that they are still within the limits of their certification and abilities just because they are still on a continuous line from OW. It is that kind of faulty thinking and rationalization that gets divers killed at any certification level.