dumpsterDiver
Banned
- Messages
- 9,003
- Reaction score
- 4,658
- # of dives
- 2500 - 4999
Last weekend a very experienced buddy had a buoyancy problem that was somewhat unusual. He normally wears about 14 lbs of lead with an aluminum tank and a 7mm full suit. For a few dives he chose to switch to a large steel tank that he knew would be considerably more negative than the aluminum one. He did not want to mess with his weight belt, so he chose to wear the full weight belt which he KNEW would make him somewhat overweighted. He wears a big scuba pro stabilizer jacket which has like 50 lbs of buoyancy, so I didnt think much about it when he asked me what to do about the weighting issue.
We were diving together (but actually solo) so I didnt really see the incident, but apparently he made it to the surface with no problem and then Murphys Law became applicable. He said that somehow the ball on the rear dump valve (of the BC) got caught on something? And began dumping all his air.
He did not want to ditch the belt and kept struggling to re-inflate the BC and to kick and exert himself as he waited for the boat to pick him up from his drift dive. When I got aboard he looked spent complaining of a headache etc. He breathed some oxygen and went to the rack until dinner time. Ruined the rest of his diving day. The next day he was ready to dive and was fine.
Three lessons I guess:
Dont deliberately dive an overweighted rig; even if it is convenient.
If you aint gonna use the rear dump; cut the stupid ball off. I personally have never learned to use the rear dump and cut the string (and ball) off my BC.
Another example where somebody should have dumped their weightbelt.
We were diving together (but actually solo) so I didnt really see the incident, but apparently he made it to the surface with no problem and then Murphys Law became applicable. He said that somehow the ball on the rear dump valve (of the BC) got caught on something? And began dumping all his air.
He did not want to ditch the belt and kept struggling to re-inflate the BC and to kick and exert himself as he waited for the boat to pick him up from his drift dive. When I got aboard he looked spent complaining of a headache etc. He breathed some oxygen and went to the rack until dinner time. Ruined the rest of his diving day. The next day he was ready to dive and was fine.
Three lessons I guess:
Dont deliberately dive an overweighted rig; even if it is convenient.
If you aint gonna use the rear dump; cut the stupid ball off. I personally have never learned to use the rear dump and cut the string (and ball) off my BC.
Another example where somebody should have dumped their weightbelt.