Dish
Are you for Scuba?
If someone wants to go from OW certification to doing AN/DP diving, why shouldn't they be able to learn it on their own, just like a pilot can learn to fly, and then simply book an exam to demonstrate their knowledge and skills? Learning to fly requires a very few hours of training with an instructor (akin to OW training), and then they are free to go fly solo as much as they want until they are ready to fly with an examiner and get their pilot's ticket. They can do all the "classroom" work online. Why do you think learning to dive requires so much more hands-on in-person training than learning to fly and can't be done using books and self-practice?
Ah, stuartv, not so fast, my friend. Your description of the flight training process as an analogue for dive training is a bit too loose. I won't go into specifics, because most of the readers on this board are probably not all that interested, but you're not permitted to fly solo unless your instructor feels that you a safe enough to do so (after a absolute minimum of 10 hours of instruction) and can then only fly as the instructor permits. Some folks take quite a bit longer to earn a solo endorsment... sometimes 50 hours or so. In this case you are training to profiency, not number of hours (in the case of diving, that might correlate to numbers of dives or total bottom time). In the end, one cannot simply "book an exam", but you require the flight instructor's endorsement that you have attained a level of proficiency that ensures you will pass the flight evaluation by a FAA-designated examiner. Instructors that habitually endorse candidates that fail this exam can have their certificates revoked. Check and balance.
Not that this has anything to do with redundancy required for deco diving...
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