Back to the reef hook topic. I've been to quite a few current diving from the ripping current of Peleliu Cut in Palau, that have killed a diver who got her mask ripped off by the current, unable to release her self off her reef hook and drown while still hooked up on the reef as described in detail in this 55 pages post:
Lessons to be learned-Death in Palau, to milder currents in Blue Corner (Palau), Blue Corner (Bali), Crystal Bay (Bali), Current Alley (Alor), The Channel (Maratua Atoll), Shotgun (Komodo), Magic Mountain (Raja Ampat), and even got my coiled wire reef hook line broke off in one on the Kandu diving in Maldives. So from my experience (after >1600 log dives), I come up with my best setup, as shown in Figure 1, below.
Figure 1: Reef Hook with 6-foot long 1/4" diameter polyester paracord and butterfly-type snap-shackles
This reef hook design is an improvement from what I have used before, a double hook with coiled wire line, as shown in Figure 2, below.
Figure 2: Reef Hook with double hooks, 6-foot long coiled wire line and two butterfly-type snap-shackles
The reasons why I made such design improvement:
1. Double-hook design is such pain-in-the-rear in terms of hooking (picking a crevice to hook on) as, if the crevice is too small that only fits to one of the tip of the reef hooks and the other tip would just sitting on a flat surface doing nothing. The reef hook tip, that hooks on the crevice, would make contact at an angle (because the other reef hook sits on a flat surface) which weakens the grip force. I had it came off the crevices a few times and got blown away by the current. When that happens, your reef-hook diving ends and it's time to deploy your DSMB ASAP to make sure the skiff pilot see where you get blown away to and follow you. If it's in Peleliu Corner and the skiff pilot misses following your DSMB, the next island to land would be in Phillipines.
Single hook design is much better, in terms of hooking point will always be at 90-degree of the reef surface and the point of contact is streamline with the current, not at an angle. If the current so strong, you might end up chipping off parts of the crevice or the hook bends up and comes unhooked.
2. Coiled wire would eventually fatigue. The polymer insulation would crack after some heavy uses. Salt water would get into the wire and corrode the wire. That happened to me at Kandu diving in Maldives, see post # 18 in this thread:
Can newbie divers enjoy diving in the Maldives?
The replacement line, 1/4" paracord, is plenty strong. I can easily cut it with my BFK if needed.
3. I do like the OEM butterfly-type snap-shackles (BSS). so I reuse them. I tie both ends of the BSS to the 6-foot, 1/4” paracord line using rock-climbing double figure-eight loop knots, so they won’t come loose unless you cut them with BFK. The BSS can be quickly release with one hand, simply by pinching the butterfly lever with your index finger while your thumb is resting on the loop (eye) end. The BSS on the reef hook end is for keeping the 1/4" paracord spirally rolled into 12-inch line (from a 6-foot long line) and fastening it to the left chest D-ring for a quick deployment. The other BSS I fasten it to my left waist D-ring. So the setup is neat & streamlined, minimizing potential entanglement, as shown in Figure 3, below.
Figure 3: Attaching my reef hook onto my BCD
I just came back from Maldives. I used it in several dive sites, one of them called Fish Head, as shown, below. We were all reef hooked on a ledge of a wall and enjoyed seeing the shark parade.