AK47Diver
Registered
I have a 7 on a single and it is no harder to manage than the 5. As others above mentioned, its a lot more convenient for air shares whether in practice or for real. When my buddy had an OOA incident the 7 worked just fine.
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While true, this is perhaps irrelevant to the OP. IF the OP is OW diving with like minded/like trained buddies, he may find that using the 5' or 7' hose is a good way to "equalize gas" between divers with significantly different SAC rates -- something my wife and I do quite often when diving on AL80's.The OOA diver has been trained to have a death grip on your BCD while using your air so I don't see the point in having 7' of hose in the way unless in you cave dive.
The standard length octo hose has been good enough for millions of people for years so for my tropical 17# BP/W I run a 22" hose for the necklaced octo and the stock octo length hose with a 360* swivel for the primary reg. It's a very clean setup for non-cave Caribbean diving. The OOA diver has been trained to have a death grip on your BCD while using your air so I don't see the point in having 7' of hose in the way unless in you cave dive.
...I never really got the whole 5' hose thing for single cylinder / OW dives. Quite frankly, I think the 40" hose for the primary was a better idea... In any case, I have a 7' hose on my singles rig, but that's just to standardize set ups between singles / doubles. If I was never going to go on to overhead diving, and just do OW single cylinder dives, I'd probably just stick with 40".
DIR or not DIR is not the issue, it is a good idea not because someone at GUE says it is or because it is posted in the DIR forum but rather it is a good idea because it works better even in OW.
A long hose primary solves a lot of OW problems and gives you a lot more options for basic OW - people just don't think about them. For example if your buddy notices they have 500 psi left while you have 1200 and you are still a couple hundred feet from the anchor line, you can hand him your long hose and swim normally to the anchor line, rather than surfacing where you are at and trying to swim in current back to the boat. In this case the ascent is also normal as the buddy can hand your primary back at some point and finish the dive on his own gas.
A 40" primary creates a large loop out over the shoulder and from a streamlining perspective is horrible. And even a 40" hose is short when handed to an OOA buddy who then has to form that hose into an S to get it into his mouth. That pretty much ensures are are going to be limited to a face to face immediate ascent. The "death gripon the BC" is an artifact of the buddy feeling the short hose is about to be pulled from his or her mouth and motivates the desire to keep you uncomfortably close. Much of the near panic you see in OOA divers is generated by the same near constant tug on their only remaining air supply - and if you provide them with a long hose, the panic subsides as there is no short hose constantly tugging on the reg.
I have never shared air with a short hose OW diver who did not suddenly like the idea when they discovered they could do something other than hold the reg in with one hand and hold onto you in a death grip with the other. Give an OW OOA diver the option to swim and ascend normally a couple feet from you and they will like it every time.
Just because something has been "good enough for millions of people for years" does not mean it is the best solution or that it is not time to get over it and move on into the 21rst century.
I've done open water OOG drills with the 40", 5' and 7' hoses. If you are doing a side-by-side touch-contact return-to-your-entry-point drill or the standard stops (six minute ascents) on a blue water ascent, I can pretty much bet you'll want the seven footer.If one is going to progress to penetration diving I can see using one (muscle memory etc...) but if one knows they are only going to be OW a 5' offers the benefits of a long hose configuration without the storage issues of a 7'.
Just my 2CW.