captain
Contributor
Please not again, we went through Devon's training rant in the solo forum.
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I am not a fan of regulation per se... especially not Legal regulation, but if you "self learn" what happens when you don't know what you don't know? Is it not good to take a class rather than try and reinvent the wheel? On the other hand I am a fan of mentoring to an extent... it's a pretty fuzzy gray line.
Anyways for wreck penetration I think a class need be taken from a competent qualified instructor, recreational outside the wreck classes are dumb!
Any form of regulation? Including training standards needed?
A good start here...I view wrecks as unstable caves.
There are in my mind 2 types of wreck dive. The "swim around the outside sticking your head through some hatches on the way". This is the standard wreck dive most people do. It requires NO further training, NO extra equipment and certainly doesn't need any fanciful watered down speciality course to do.
The 2nd type involves wreck penetration. This to me needs redundant gas sources, long hose or similar for air sharing, lights and backups, proper line drills and far more rigorous dive planning. In short, its very similar in requirements to cave diving regarding what is needed and hazards.
I fail to see why anyone would pay for a speciality to do the first type of dive and the recreational agency courses certainly dont cover what is needed for the 2nd type of dive.
Ahem...... it is also unfair to put other divers at risk who may have to conduct rescue or body recovery operations. Campaigning for personal freedom is one issue. Putting others at risk is another.