40” under the arm, with an Omni swivel and to go along with the D420 experiments a short shut off valve, 22” bungee second and usually a pony (13 or 19 cf) or the elephant 40cf.
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48" braided hose primary routed under arm with an elbow at the second stage, with a necklaced second stage on a 22" braided hose.
Bought the 48" hose on sale (much cheaper than a 40" hose). Being a "skinflint SCUBA" diver, I went with the less expensive hose.
I may need to try the 48” hose. I use a Litehawk BC and my 40” hose catches on the bottom of my right strap adjustment tab. Drives me nuts! Thanks for the idea.
Erik
Y-valve?all tanks here have two posts
I may have to try that in the pool .... when pools are open....I'm surprise that the conventional way (short hose primary and 40" Octo) only gets 13.7% vote (as of now). So I'm in the minority?
My 40" yellow hose is coming out of the left port of my first stage, loop under my left arm and (pull-release) clip the Octo on to my BCD left chest D-ring for a couple reasons:
1. When I donate it to my buddy who look at me face to face, the yellow hose would make a half-circle loop from my first stage to his / her mouth, not an S-shape pattern with the conventional way (which is the yellow hose is coming from the right port of the first stage, loop under the right arm and clip the Octo on to the BCD right chest D-ring. The S-shape pattern would shorten the path and distance between the two of us to almost hugging each other.
2. My BCD right chest D-ring is already used for clipping my camera leash.
Y-valve?
I've had to share air with an OOA diver, and also extended shore dives so my buddy who was low on air could stay with me all the way to the exit. The long hose came in very handy each time. We were able to swim side by side without holding on to each other, which is extremely difficult with 40 inch hose.When I dove a standard recreational setup. Under arm primary, necklaced backup.
Not much of a transition to sidemount.
Long hose has it's place. But in single tank recreational setup it is more of a nuisance than a benefit. If you find a benefit in a long hose, you are probably not in a recreational dive scene. And this is a question about recreational dive configuration, not advanced configuration. That thread is down the hall.