Nicolas Pottier
Registered
Definitely falls in the minor mishaps side of things, but today diving in Puerto Lopez on a shallow reef in rental gear had my primary second stage start breathing wet in one breath and the next breathed almost completely water This was about 45' in at around 7 meters. Entire dive was shallow and had no safety stop needed due to that. After second breath of water switched to octopus which breathed fine, though really not a fan of the holder they used (mouthpiece style) as it was a bit hard to remove. At least it was where I expected it to be.
Unsurprisingly floated up during the switch and surfaced. Guide was on it and noticed me going up and followed. We were so near boat decided to not continue though offered to. Buddy came up a second later.
Later on the boat inspected the second stage, looked like a section of the diaphragm had just slipped out from the retaining disc. Interesting to me that that happened so far into the dive. It was easy to remove the ring and reseat it. Though I don't have much experience looking at different regulators the seating surface seemed kinda shallow to me, no idea if that design contributed to it unseating. (seems more likely poor assembly during a servicing?)
Thoughts / lesson learned:
* As with many chartered dive boats, it was a bit of a flurry when everybody gets in. Glad I insisted on doing my entire safety check including removing the octopus from it's annoying holder to breathe on it, I may have panicked trying to remove it when it counted otherwise due to its design.
* I *think* I could have made it to my buddy without another breath if my octopus was also not working but I doubt I would have had the discipline to try since I was so shallow. She was maybe 4 meters away but we were in surf so quite a bit of variable current. If it was life and death I would have made it I think but wouldn't have been fun. Is that the right distance? Of course things would have been that much more hectic by then as I would have wasted more time on getting octopus out and finding it didn't work either.
* Only more convinced that a necklace secondary makes sense after this.
In any case thought I'd share. Of course super minor in the world of dive incidents but maybe will instill others the extra courage needed to hold up the boat as you do your pre dive check.
Unsurprisingly floated up during the switch and surfaced. Guide was on it and noticed me going up and followed. We were so near boat decided to not continue though offered to. Buddy came up a second later.
Later on the boat inspected the second stage, looked like a section of the diaphragm had just slipped out from the retaining disc. Interesting to me that that happened so far into the dive. It was easy to remove the ring and reseat it. Though I don't have much experience looking at different regulators the seating surface seemed kinda shallow to me, no idea if that design contributed to it unseating. (seems more likely poor assembly during a servicing?)
Thoughts / lesson learned:
* As with many chartered dive boats, it was a bit of a flurry when everybody gets in. Glad I insisted on doing my entire safety check including removing the octopus from it's annoying holder to breathe on it, I may have panicked trying to remove it when it counted otherwise due to its design.
* I *think* I could have made it to my buddy without another breath if my octopus was also not working but I doubt I would have had the discipline to try since I was so shallow. She was maybe 4 meters away but we were in surf so quite a bit of variable current. If it was life and death I would have made it I think but wouldn't have been fun. Is that the right distance? Of course things would have been that much more hectic by then as I would have wasted more time on getting octopus out and finding it didn't work either.
* Only more convinced that a necklace secondary makes sense after this.
In any case thought I'd share. Of course super minor in the world of dive incidents but maybe will instill others the extra courage needed to hold up the boat as you do your pre dive check.