I've been reading the arguments against the "Spare Air" recently. I feel a strong urge to make some thoughts known and perhaps encourage some realistic thinking and training ideas. I'm shocked that no one has suggested "FREEDIVING" as the obvious illustration that a person can make an ascent from a depth of say... 100 feet... to the surface with a WIDE margin of safety using a spare air.
Now, let me explain.... obviously scuba diving ascents are FAR different from freediving ascents. Freedivers can blast to the surface safely, while scuba divers that blast to the surface would experience soda pop bubbles in bad places.
Background:
1. I'm a freediver and a scuba diver.
2. I dive 80-100 ft. with a single steel tank and a 3.0 cf Spare Air on the front of my BC.
2. I can hold my breath for 4 minutes... say... 3 minutes when i'm really moving alot.
So... a spare air to me? Good lord. That's MORE than 10 minutes of breathing. I do an exercise where i hold to diaphragm convulsion... exhale.... inhale a single breath... hold... I can go 10 minutes on 5-6 breaths.
To tie it all together... we all know we can't hold our breath while ascending from a scuba dive. BUT... that doesn't mean you have to suck air like a diesel engine either. It seems as though a lot of you guys are PLANNING AND TRAINING to be able to just hyperventilate air in an emergency. I PLAN AND TRAIN to STOP BREATHING ( trailing bubbles of course). 30 breaths from a spare air is a huge amount IF you know how to use the wisely. A tiny stream of bubbles is all you need to stay safe and not pop a lung. When i ascend from freediving... i usually trail bubbles anyway just to stay in the habit.
Single caveat: I do NOT swim in currents. I go down to a wreck, and I can ALWAYS go straight up. I don't go in caves... I don't even dive at night without more equipment. So this discussion is for true open water with no complications.
I STRONGLY suggest that anyone who is truly interested in safety as a scuba diver... do some freediving. It shows you just how long you can last on a breath. It also reduces panic an EXTREME amount in the case of an ooa emergency. Your thoughts cease to be "OH MY GOD I DON'T HAVE AIR!!!!".... to something like... "I've been out of air before when I was freediving." no big deal. No rush, but deliberate. Reach down, grab that spare air that you've practiced getting in 3 seconds or less to your mouth... get a full breath... trail those TINY bubbles... and make your way slowly to the surface.
By the way, i am a firm believer that any human being can hold their breath at LEAST 3 minutes with a moderate amount of training/practice. I personally have taught people how to go from a measly 30 second breath hold to 3.5 minutes.
Now, let me explain.... obviously scuba diving ascents are FAR different from freediving ascents. Freedivers can blast to the surface safely, while scuba divers that blast to the surface would experience soda pop bubbles in bad places.
Background:
1. I'm a freediver and a scuba diver.
2. I dive 80-100 ft. with a single steel tank and a 3.0 cf Spare Air on the front of my BC.
2. I can hold my breath for 4 minutes... say... 3 minutes when i'm really moving alot.
So... a spare air to me? Good lord. That's MORE than 10 minutes of breathing. I do an exercise where i hold to diaphragm convulsion... exhale.... inhale a single breath... hold... I can go 10 minutes on 5-6 breaths.
To tie it all together... we all know we can't hold our breath while ascending from a scuba dive. BUT... that doesn't mean you have to suck air like a diesel engine either. It seems as though a lot of you guys are PLANNING AND TRAINING to be able to just hyperventilate air in an emergency. I PLAN AND TRAIN to STOP BREATHING ( trailing bubbles of course). 30 breaths from a spare air is a huge amount IF you know how to use the wisely. A tiny stream of bubbles is all you need to stay safe and not pop a lung. When i ascend from freediving... i usually trail bubbles anyway just to stay in the habit.
Single caveat: I do NOT swim in currents. I go down to a wreck, and I can ALWAYS go straight up. I don't go in caves... I don't even dive at night without more equipment. So this discussion is for true open water with no complications.
I STRONGLY suggest that anyone who is truly interested in safety as a scuba diver... do some freediving. It shows you just how long you can last on a breath. It also reduces panic an EXTREME amount in the case of an ooa emergency. Your thoughts cease to be "OH MY GOD I DON'T HAVE AIR!!!!".... to something like... "I've been out of air before when I was freediving." no big deal. No rush, but deliberate. Reach down, grab that spare air that you've practiced getting in 3 seconds or less to your mouth... get a full breath... trail those TINY bubbles... and make your way slowly to the surface.
By the way, i am a firm believer that any human being can hold their breath at LEAST 3 minutes with a moderate amount of training/practice. I personally have taught people how to go from a measly 30 second breath hold to 3.5 minutes.