Pro ear masks

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boliver_69

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Location
Summerdale, Alabama
# of dives
25 - 49
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Well looks like it will be a trial by fire then....

Not trying to talk you out of buying something, have you seen a doctor to make sure you dont have any sinus or ear problems exhisting. Alot of times thats usually the case. I also know divers that do take a sinu tab before diving, non drowsy kind. Being a new diver like myself sometimes it a matter of you getting used to it.

As for the mask, I don't know anyone who has used one.
 



Neither of your links work, so it is hard to tell what you are talking about.
 
I have used the Pro Ear 2000 with great success. I used it alone for a couple months in Dec. and Jan. of last year. Then I had an opportunity to use Doc's ProPlugs along with the mask, and I liked the results even better. Once the water warmed up I was able to dive with just the plugs. Now I dive with nekkid ears unless I feel an infection is coming on, then it's back to the plugs and/or mask.
 
One of our customers used it while diving with us and he loved it and said it worked absolutely great for him. So there's one positive feedback for you...
 
I have a Pro-ear 2000 and love it for cold water. Sometimes still get water in it, but it does help....alot. I live and dive in Wisconsin so there is never really "warm" water, espically now, just waiting for the ice to get thick enough to support us
 
Hi, I am new to diving and having difficulty in equalizing my ears. I decided to try the doc's proplugs and will dive with them on soon. It says the proplugs will keep the water out until 5-6 meters due to the surface tension and then they allow the water in due to the overwhelming pressure after that depth. But should I wait to do valsalva until 5 meters that feels the water in my ear or should I start to do valsalva (slowly) at the beginning of the dive?

Thanks,
 
Hi, I am new to diving and having difficulty in equalizing my ears. I decided to try the doc's proplugs and will dive with them on soon. It says the proplugs will keep the water out until 5-6 meters due to the surface tension and then they allow the water in due to the overwhelming pressure after that depth. But should I wait to do valsalva until 5 meters that feels the water in my ear or should I start to do valsalva (slowly) at the beginning of the dive?

Thanks,

The ear plugs (and the mask) have nothing to do with equalizing. They have to do with keeping your ears dry.

Putting on a wetsuit does not mean your body does not feel pressure.

Putting in ear plugs does not mean your ears do not feel pressure.

These things have nothing to do with equalizing. If you are having trouble equalizing, you might need to see a doctor who knows something about diving (which will be next to impossible to find, if my experience says anything).

Don't practice equalizing unless you are diving. (Of course, if you are not diving, what you are doing in not 'equalizing', it's "potentially hurting your ears by repeatedly overpressurizing them". If you "practice" (in quotes) 'equalizing' (in quotes) out of the water, you are making it less likely you will be able to actually do it in the water, because your ears will be irritated from being repeatedly over-pressurized.)

It's a small passage in your ears. If you wait to equalize, that small passage will close and you will lose the ability to force the air into your ear except with so much force that you risk hurting your eardrums. If you 'practice' out of the water, you will inflame that passage and make equalizing harder to do.

Diving is not sleeping on a feather bed. Everything is new and different. The change in pressure, from the surface of the ocean to 30 feet, is the same as the change in pressure from the surface of the earth to outer space. You never needed the skill of equalizing (or any skill involved with diving) before. Of course you cannot do it so well when you first start. The only place to practice the skills used in diving is when you are diving.

No skill you have learned at any point in your life prior to diving is of any use to you in diving. None. Everything is different. If other people seem to have no problems doing things like equalizing, don't worry about it. It's not a competition. Some people tan well, other people pick up new diving skills faster.

If you have never ever spent time in the water before, the sensation of water in your ears may feel strange. So might having to breathe through a regulator. So might being weightless. Experience will get you used to the changes.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/peregrine/

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