Glaucus
Registered
Paddler,
You would be wise to heed RedHead's advice and not think about clipping a lift bag or SMB to your now defunct bouyancy compensator. Doing so would not only increase your ascent, but it would also increase your chances for a stay in your local hyperbearic chamber. Here is my freely shared opinion on why it's not a good idea: the magic eight ball of task loading says that all signs point to no.
Your bc breaks and you think you'll need help ascending so you clip off a lift bag. Now you have to find a way to get air into it. Most likely you'll use your primary in some way because you realize squeezing off your secondary could cause a free flow. Once the air hits the bag, you're on your way up. If the bag doesn't jerk you into an awkward position, then maybe you will have a chance to try and pull the dump valve in a near feeble attempt to control your ascent rate as you simultaneously jam your reg back in your oral cavity. Now you only have to decide if you're going to watch bubbles to montior your rate or if you're going to swing your computer to your saucer wide eyes and use that. Now do all that in a one smooth motion with just a seasoning of panic and I'll give you my old bowling trophy - sure, I'll snap off the bowling ball and rubber band a small tank on his back. Now count the number of tasks and if that number is higher than two, I sure wouldn't be doing it.
Can a bc failure occur? Absolutely. Is it likely? Not really. At some point you are going to have to trust your gear. And don't panic! If you're breathing, your situation is only urgent and not emergent. You're a solo diver. You're good at what you do. You know how to weight yourself properly. Stay calm! Try swimming up. Ditch weight as a very last resort. And if you feel the need to use a smb or lift bag, clip it to a reel, deploy it, and use the line as an ascent assistance device kick-pull-kick-pull-kick-pull-kick-pull-kick...
Acquatically yours,
You would be wise to heed RedHead's advice and not think about clipping a lift bag or SMB to your now defunct bouyancy compensator. Doing so would not only increase your ascent, but it would also increase your chances for a stay in your local hyperbearic chamber. Here is my freely shared opinion on why it's not a good idea: the magic eight ball of task loading says that all signs point to no.
Your bc breaks and you think you'll need help ascending so you clip off a lift bag. Now you have to find a way to get air into it. Most likely you'll use your primary in some way because you realize squeezing off your secondary could cause a free flow. Once the air hits the bag, you're on your way up. If the bag doesn't jerk you into an awkward position, then maybe you will have a chance to try and pull the dump valve in a near feeble attempt to control your ascent rate as you simultaneously jam your reg back in your oral cavity. Now you only have to decide if you're going to watch bubbles to montior your rate or if you're going to swing your computer to your saucer wide eyes and use that. Now do all that in a one smooth motion with just a seasoning of panic and I'll give you my old bowling trophy - sure, I'll snap off the bowling ball and rubber band a small tank on his back. Now count the number of tasks and if that number is higher than two, I sure wouldn't be doing it.
Can a bc failure occur? Absolutely. Is it likely? Not really. At some point you are going to have to trust your gear. And don't panic! If you're breathing, your situation is only urgent and not emergent. You're a solo diver. You're good at what you do. You know how to weight yourself properly. Stay calm! Try swimming up. Ditch weight as a very last resort. And if you feel the need to use a smb or lift bag, clip it to a reel, deploy it, and use the line as an ascent assistance device kick-pull-kick-pull-kick-pull-kick-pull-kick...
Acquatically yours,