CptTightPants21
Contributor
I don't think it really matters what is said here. You have been told repeatedly that there is no way you are ready for tech with 50 dives and repeatedly you have ignored people with far more experience than yourself. You use the shield of "I need instruction" and "Well, if my instructor thinks I..." to take classes and learn skills that are learned from actually diving, mentoring from others, and taking classes that ARE NOT AN/DP. Loss of buoyancy is one things that comes with training and shows inexperience, 20ft to 10-12ft is is one thing, to actually breach the surface shows you are no where near ready. No one should doing their first dives in doubles for AN/DP
I already know where this is going, you are going to do a crap ton of dives with him, string along a half way decent skill on this dive, sort of complete that drill on that dive, meet the "standard" on that. All without having a real foundation or mastery and he is just going to give you the card because, yes, you technically passed the class within standards. This type of instructor isn't rare in scuba, its how I know a guy with AN/DP card and 50 plus deco dives who can't back kick and his helicopter turns look like a scene from Black Hawk Down.
I just would have thought that a person who is on this board so much and who sees the level of experience and skill level that is required to be a "real" technical diver would know better.
I have already written this off and I consider you beyond help, but my last little suggestion:
List five characteristics of what you think a tech diver should look like. Could be something simple like hold position at an actual X for Y time, or give a blue water S-drill with zero loss of buoyancy. I would like to see the list, but even if you don't post it, look back on it after you get your AN/DP card and know in your heart whether or not your really "passed".
I already know where this is going, you are going to do a crap ton of dives with him, string along a half way decent skill on this dive, sort of complete that drill on that dive, meet the "standard" on that. All without having a real foundation or mastery and he is just going to give you the card because, yes, you technically passed the class within standards. This type of instructor isn't rare in scuba, its how I know a guy with AN/DP card and 50 plus deco dives who can't back kick and his helicopter turns look like a scene from Black Hawk Down.
I just would have thought that a person who is on this board so much and who sees the level of experience and skill level that is required to be a "real" technical diver would know better.
I have already written this off and I consider you beyond help, but my last little suggestion:
List five characteristics of what you think a tech diver should look like. Could be something simple like hold position at an actual X for Y time, or give a blue water S-drill with zero loss of buoyancy. I would like to see the list, but even if you don't post it, look back on it after you get your AN/DP card and know in your heart whether or not your really "passed".